The benefits of EOTech Speed, accuracy, and durability summed up in a great 50 second spot.
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say goodbye to you blender
Why does it have to be soooooooo expensive?
@gloryglorybarcelona Never, EVER put an EOTech in a blender or I'll get really sad.
@cobrachoppergirl You're absolutely right. I don't know of any sight, anywhere, that can automatically adjust for drop, as drop depends on muzzle velocity, bullet shape, powder charge, ambient moisture, etc. For long-range shooting, a scope is the way to do it. However, for closer stuff, these things are handy. The biggest successful use for these for the average firearm owner would probably be bird-hunting shotguns, although a lot of these have cropped up in tactical shooting classes.
I'd buy this but there is no radar range finding to the target, to auto adjust the site to compensate for bullet drop. So its kinda useless for long range shots where bullet drop really starts to come into play. You'll bee hitting several feet under where your dot is.
what makes this better than a red dot sight? i dont see much of a difference
@JSCincorporated The ring is incredibly helpful. The dot inside it is also much smaller. The ring helps when needing to aim quickly but without pinpoint accuracy, like when surprised at close range. It's like having 2 settings on at once without any conflict with each other. It sort-of draws your eyes into the center dot, faster than a dot alone can do. If it bugs you switching the diode with a plain one is possible with 3rd party parts.
@JSCincorporated In the regard of peripheral vision, not quite. Aimpoint is still great though, I just like to see everything.
@gloryglorybarcelona Nope.
I think these should definitely be used more commonly in the armies, they just can't be beat.
Parallax Free is the correct term.