If you can handle the size the FN pistol is a great value. As to the Doctor sight, it might be great but it is going to get exposed to a lot of fouling of the optic if you fire more than just a few rounds.
If you can handle the size the FN pistol is a great value. As to the Doctor sight, it might be great but it is going to get exposed to a lot of fouling of the optic if you fire more than just a few rounds.
I must say, I like it and especially if it comes in black and not OD. The different frame colors don't do it for me, I prefer evil black. I also like the co-witnessing, they did this one right by the looks of things.
I really wish this thing had some sort of LEM trigger option. I want one, but I can't stand where the thumb safety sits in relation to my thumbs.
Ever try a dot-sight on a carbine? Find it useful? (most folks find it useful). It is FAR more useful on a handgun.
I've shot USPSA & 3gun for over a decade now. Handguns are more difficult to learn to shoot well than carbines. I've shot dot-sighted handguns and I've shot with only irons - the dot is MUCH quicker to learn.
If you ask about carbines, the Dot sight has clearly "arrived" as a useful combat tool. It should not take long for the world to recognize how useful a co-witnessed, reliable dot on a handgun can be.
Last edited by TY44934; 05-14-09 at 15:58.
The first time I saw a picture of a Docter red dot sight on top of an auto pistol was in 1991... let's see if it catches on now
The Son Tay raiders had the earliest version of red dot sights on their guns when they pulled off their raid. It only took another 25 years for the technology to catch up to prove the concept. Most small dot sights, like the doctor, are notoriously fragile. If they can make a sight the size of a doctor but with the robustness and battery life of an aimpoint than we are seeing the future. Frankly I think we are still 5 to 10 years away from that.
rubberneck, I agree with your "5 to 10 years"... we'll see.
I like it. But want it black.
Kinda makes me want this sight setup for one of my USP's.
For God and the soldier we adore, In time of danger, not before! The danger passed, and all things righted, God is forgotten and the soldier slighted." - Rudyard Kipling
+1 rubberneck's comments
Bookmarks