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12/3/2010 5:14:24 PM EDT
I was reading about a problem with seeing the lit reticle on ACOGs when in shade. Do Accupoints suffer from the same problem?

Jim
12/3/2010 6:21:43 PM EDT
[#1]
All Trijcon reticles that are lit by fiber optic would be daylight dependent so brightness is totally depended on the amount of available ambient light.  However, never had any issue with my TR24 when shooting in the shaded wood during daytime.
12/3/2010 7:16:44 PM EDT
[#2]
I was thinking about the TR20-2G mildot reticle with green dot or the TR20-1G duplex reticle with green dot.
I haven't decided on the Trijicon for sure. Until the thread about the problem in ACOGs I wanted one of them.

Jim
12/3/2010 10:38:02 PM EDT
[#3]
No worries, the TR20 is a fiber optic and tritium illuminated so it is not totally dependant on ambient light.


TR20-2G: Trijicon AccuPoint® - 3-9x40 Riflescope, Mil-Dot
Crosshair with Green Dot
The newest innovation in riflescopes, this Trijicon AccuPoint
features a Mil-Dot crosshair reticle with an illuminated center
dot.  The scope is illuminated through the use of fiber optics
and tritium, providing a vivid aiming point without the need for
failure-prone batteries.
 



12/3/2010 10:41:54 PM EDT
[#4]
just a note, that the dot reticle on the TR24 series is very, very tiny, and pretty much useless except in direct sunlight. I don't know if the mil-dot versions use the same size dot, but if they do, your money would be better spent on a battery illuminated mil-dot scope.
12/5/2010 12:01:09 PM EDT
[#5]
Quoted:
I was reading about a problem with seeing the lit reticle on ACOGs when in shade. Do Accupoints suffer from the same problem?

Jim


I think you may be referring to the problem of being in a darkened area and looking out into a bright area, if this is what you mean, then yes, the accupoint behaves in the same way as the ACOG.
12/5/2010 12:17:06 PM EDT
[#6]
Quoted:
Quoted:
I was reading about a problem with seeing the lit reticle on ACOGs when in shade. Do Accupoints suffer from the same problem?

Jim


I think you may be referring to the problem of being in a darkened area and looking out into a bright area, if this is what you mean, then yes, the accupoint behaves in the same way as the ACOG.


That is exactly what I was referring to. Since that seems to be just the way they are I might as well save my money and either buy a non-illiuminated scope or one that runs on batteries.
I was all excited about not needing a battery, but it looks like that's what I need.

Jim
12/5/2010 2:03:31 PM EDT
[#7]



Quoted:



Quoted:

I was reading about a problem with seeing the lit reticle on ACOGs when in shade. Do Accupoints suffer from the same problem?



Jim




I think you may be referring to the problem of being in a darkened area and looking out into a bright area, if this is what you mean, then yes, the accupoint behaves in the same way as the ACOG.



Yup. The fiber color will be gone but the black etching of the reticule will still remain, just like a regular scope.



 
12/30/2010 1:35:22 AM EDT
[#8]
I just pick one up and I'll tell you this.  There is never a situation where you can't see either the green dot or the Crosshairs.  75% of the time you can see both.  At least with my informal testing.  I haven't actually shot it yet, I've just recreated a bunch of lighting situations to see how it would perform.  The beauty of the Trijicon is never having to worry about batteries and having a clearly visible lit reticule no matter how bright it is outside.  That's what sold me.  

If you're in the dark and your target is lit, you have the crosshairs, so it doesn't really matter if you can see the illumination or not.  .

I have this reticule:

12/30/2010 7:48:57 AM EDT
[#9]
Trijicon TR24s in a pitch-dark room.





The exact same set-up as above, except illumination via a weapon-mounted SureFire light.






Scope in a dark room, looking into a brightly lit area.






For comparison, Short Dot LE in a dark room, looking into a brightly lit area.


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