Stoney275,
What light and mount are you using? Do you have any pics of your setup?
Thanks!
Stoney275,
What light and mount are you using? Do you have any pics of your setup?
Thanks!
Seems to me if you're running a railed forearm (I don't) you could sacrifice BUIS sight radius and do the same thing on your own.
They had no right to win. Yet they did, and in doing so they changed the course of a war...even against the greatest of odds, there is something in the human spirit - a magic blend of skill, faith and valor - that can lift men from certain defeat to incredible victory.
Dport,
I was thinking the same thing but depending on what light and mount you are using sometimes the light will be too high and when the BUIS is deployed the light will block the front sight.
The mount above is actually lower than the rail so you don't have to worry about blocking the sight.
I guess I need get an X300 and see how it works. I'm also still waiting on the new redesigned SR07 switch...
Good point.
They had no right to win. Yet they did, and in doing so they changed the course of a war...even against the greatest of odds, there is something in the human spirit - a magic blend of skill, faith and valor - that can lift men from certain defeat to incredible victory.
My reply to some other inquiry of the same nature:
An X200/300 sits below the sight line of your irons/red dot. You "notice" it from behind the rifle but if you run a fixed front sight it is not overly distracting. I've not noticed any glare issues with that positioning vs other positions. The following pics are not the ideal setup as the FF rail on this rifle is too long but I threw it on there to illustrate. (You could however move the light and FS rearward even on such a long rail to get better positioning) After trying a few different setups we had settled on a 9" or 10" rail with an LMT fixed sight behind the light. Some were running tape switches (which would help on a long rail like this one or for folks that use VFG's), while others (who like driving the carbine from the front of the rail) can easily thumb the switch. We came up with this for a fairly specific set of circumstances but found that it worked pretty well anyplace this light (X200/300) would be appropriate and you didn't need to do certain other things, like running a DBAL.
It would be nice if these lights had a disable switch.
My back up iron sights are permanently deployed. I have a standard FSB. The Daniel Defense rail I have is the 12.0 FSP model. My sight radius is that of a standard M4 carbine.
I have a few pics of me using this setup in the GTA sniper match (Grant saw me using it at his stage). I suck at posting pics that have to be hosted, otherwise I'd post one or two.
I hate name droppers, but I'm going to commit that sin. Ken Hackathorn has seen me with this setup a number of times and he approved of it. With the light at the 12 o'clock position, you avoid the down side of having a light at either the 3 or 9 when it comes to performing CQB and negotiating a corner.
Ken mentioned Stony's setup at the recent LL class as a recommend way of doing business...
Kevin S. Boland
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FN America, LLC
Office: 703.288.3500 x181 | Mobile: 407-451-4544 | Fax: 703.288.4505
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I usually run this mount on my middy but it's um... inop.
Lights jutting off the side of a rifle always bothered me. This mount turned out to be exactly what I needed.
Sights remain completely unobstructed with the light in place as shown in the 2nd picture.
The TLR-1 will be replaced by an X300 next week.
Topcrest,
Thanks for the pics, that's exactly what I'm looking at doing with a X300 and a SR switch.
Has there been any issues with it getting loose?
BTW, after taking a closer look at your pics it looks like I might neet to mount it further forward than you if I want to the XT back plate. It looks like with the mount directly in front of the FSB there won't be enough room for the X300 with a XT backplate installed.
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