Genius or Silly?

Not sure itā€™s going to be a big game changer in low light. With the support hand moving, you will not be able to activate your WML using a tape switch. Now you can turn it on and leave it on, but thatā€™s not optimal tactics. Daytime on the other hand, Iā€™m intrigued and would love to try it.
 
Not sure itā€™s going to be a big game changer in low light. With the support hand moving, you will not be able to activate your WML using a tape switch. Now you can turn it on and leave it on, but thatā€™s not optimal tactics. Daytime on the other hand, Iā€™m intrigued and would love to try it.
Just thinking about that a bit... I situations using a WML, I would likely stay at a low magnification level and mount the light switch accordingly. That's my first thoughts anyway. for my situation.
 
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I wish them all the best, but outside of competition, Iā€™m struggling to imagine a scenario where (1) jumping from 1X to 6X/8X/10X or back is necessary and (2) taking the second to crank a power ring by hand was a non-starter. Needing magnification is a sign of a target being too far away for a positive IDā€¦ and thatā€™s a scenario where you have time to crank a throw lever.

The only scenario I can imagine is one where someone has made entry with their scope maxed out on accident, and even then, that person isnā€™t going to notice the magnification until they shoulder and put eyes through glassā€”which is a point ā€œtoo lateā€ to fix the foul-up.

Does the system work in prone better than a throw lever? Does it make it more difficult to run a throw lever?
 
A lot of fair criticisms. Guess time will tell. One thing I can say, it will most likely fair better in the competition arena than the civilian market.
 
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