DarkLordOfOptics
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Guns, Optics, 2nd Amendment and resisting the Left in everything they touch.
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Bullpups. Black Rain Ordnance.

This may be getting a little repetitive, but having lived in California for many years, I am very used to thinking about how to work around increasingly stupid and invasive 2nd Amendment restrictions. Also, I am back in California for another funeral (in a few hours) and I need something to take my mind off of that.
I have talked a little bit about the upcoming New Mexico restrictions, but some of the bills were so badly written that rather than present them to the committee they pulled them to change the text. Usually, that comes back even worse, but we'll see what they come up with. This time around I want to re-visit the pistol brace prohibition that ATF recently foistered on us. Given all the pending lawsuits, it is not quite a done deal, but I doubt they will find a judge to put a temporary stay on it while the court considers the rule's constitutionality. Whichever way it ends up going, around mid-May we will all have to make some decisions. As I have mentioned it elsewhere, I make it a point to be in compliance with what laws/regulations are on the books whether I agree with them or not. That is a part of being a law abiding citizen. There is a lot of us who hold this view. There are always people talking about the boogaloo and all that. It is not us. They are just stirring the crap to make themselves feel good in front of their friends online. However, if you want to know when the real fun is going to happen... well, that will be when people like me, middle-aged guys with children to protect, get really irate. We are many. We are slow to rise up. We are implacable once in motion.

But, I yet again digress...
With the restrictions on moving around with SBRs, I have no plans to register anything. That means in mid-May all pistol-brace firearms have to be taken apart. What replaces them? The first option and the one we have discussed earlier is setting up an integrally suppressed AR with a permanently mounted suppressor. I will likely set up at least one 300Blackout semi-auto that way and maybe a semi-auto 8.6 Blackout as well when I put one together. Perhaps, I can convince the guys at Q to make me a Boom Box with a permanently mounted suppressor.
What about applications where your primary goal is to have a firearm of fairly short overall length, but a suppressor is not something you hugely care about or want to pay for?
The natural solution to that is a bullpup. I keep on gong back and forth on this. I have played with a good number of bullpups over the years and they have their strengths and weaknesses. The obvious strength is that you can have a 26.1" long rifle without it being an SBR. The obvious weakness is that gun handling can get a little odd with the magazine well behind the grip. The balance can also get a little odd. Triggers are often not great given long connecting bars between the trigger itself and the location of the sear. Ambidextrous operation can be a little tricky with the complexities of bullpup ejection.
I have been looking at different bullpups on and off for a few years. A few have been on my list to pick up, but not top priority. That might be changing depending on where New Mexico regulations go.
The trigger concern has been to a significant degree alleviated. Keltec RDB has a pretty decent trigger. Tavor X95 has an available aftermarket trigger that is pretty good. DesertTech's MDR has an improved trigger that is perfectly respectable.

Kel-tec has a couple of RDB models without pistol grips which might be the thing to do in New Mexico given the laws they are trying to push through. Hopefully, Kel-tec will add a few new calibers eventually, but it takes them a while. There is also a risk of reliability issues. I really like Keltec innovation, but the CP33 experience jaded me. It works now, but....

The most proven bullpup design out there is the Israeli Tavor, since it is actually used in service by the IDF. If I were to choose one bullpup to get right now for general purpose use, I would likely get the Tavor.
MDR is a very clever design, but I do not trust anything from Desert Tech until they are at least three or four generations of design iterations into it.
On top of all that, I saw a bullpup prototype at SHOT Show that made me shelve all my bullpup acquisition plans for a bit.

Black Rain Ordnance had a few bullpup prototypes there and there were really innovative. They have developed their own version of a gas system that promises to have extremely soft recoil impulse. The rifles were fairly light and maneuverable, but mostly importantly they were balanced just right with all the accessories. Somewhat importantly, they are designed to take any normal AR grip, which means that I can use the grips that actually work for my hands, or use a finned grip if New Mexico follows California's insanity.
Now, these were prototypes, so the proof is in the pudding, so to speak. Once they make it into production we will see how they hold up. I had a long talk with the guy who designed them and I walked away thinking that this has a very fair chance of working.

The first prototypes he had were in 308 and there were normal stock and DMR versions with adjustable stock and cheekpiece. They were in the same weight range as normal hunting rifles, so even suppressed these can be true general purpose guns while maintaining decent overall length.

A long time ago, the good Col Cooper theorized that a general purpose gun should be under 40" or so for good handling. He was talking about bolt guns, but it is a pretty nice target to aim for except I want it to be under 40" suppressed. Bullpups, like the upcoming design from Black Rain, easily get me there and their initial chambering and configuration satisfies damn near all of the scout rifle requirement Col Cooper set out in terms of size, weight and capability.

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Vortex Defender XL Green

This is the second time Vortex' Defender XL crosses my path. I was very impressed with the original red dot version, so I was curious to see how the one with the green dot works for my eyes.
To get the details, see the attached video.
The cliff's notes version is that I am just as impressed with this one. In terms of collimation quality and parallax control, it is quite exceptional.
https://alnk.to/881BEV1

00:10:20
Primary Arms HTX-1 US Made red dot sight

I've had this RDS for a bit over two months now and I am beyond pleased with it.
Despite some spirited abuse, it keeps soldiering on.
https://alnk.to/1C9z5dw
It is a very nice RDS and being fully made in the US does not hurt either.

00:13:03
Delta Stryker 3.5-21x44 Wrap-up

This scope comes up a lot since I really like the configuration. It is time to do a final wrap-up of it.

It is one of my favourite scopes on the market today, especially for the money, since I naturally lean toward general purpose-ish designs. Still, while the 3.5-21x44 Stryker is relatively compact and light, it still clearly leans toward the precision side of things, which suites me very well.

https://annexdefense.com/optics-and-optic-accessories/delta-optics/

00:10:25
Had to switch to a different streaming service

Rumble Studio crapped out on me. so I hadd to stream using a different service

Well, imagine THAT....

I wonder if all of the Youtube frauds who spent the last few weeks shamelessly lying for clicks are going to go apologize to Sig now.

https://taskandpurpose.com/news/air-force-m18-arrest/

Area 419 and Odinworks Muzzlebrakes raffle

Just a reminder: on Tuesday, August 12th at around 7pm, Aaron and I will go over out impressions from the TRT Sniper Challenge in a bit more detail. We have the course of fire, so we'll go over how the stages were set up and the challenges presented by this rather unusual (by my standards match).

Somewhere half way through the livestream, I will raffle off a couple of items I picked up off of the prize table.

One is the Area 419 Hellfire Competition brake.

The other is a tunable brake from Odinworks.

The pictures for both are attached.

In order to enter the raffle, you have to be a member of this community (darklordofoptics.locals.com). You do not have to be a paying supporter. A free account is enough for this.

If you would like to enter the raffle, send me an email with the following information:
-the item you are going for (Area419 or Odinworks)
-your username from this Locals community

send the email to [email protected]

I will accept entries until ~8PM on ...

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Steiner C35 Gen2 Mount
from Annex Defense

The production version of the Annex Defense's mount for the Steiner C35 Gen2 thermal Clip-on is finally here.  At $1600 (when this is published), the clip-on is an absolute steal.

I've had it for a few days, but, me being the good old paranoid me, I spent some time shooting with it before posting anything.  I had a couple of days with it prior to last weekend's match in Montana and a couple of days after.  Another to pop it on and off a few times and get a couple of hundred rounds of 6.5Grendel through the gun to see if anything shakes loose.  So far so good.

The C35 Gen2 clip-on is sitting on my 6.5Grendel AR as a part of a long running "Only One" project that I have.  It pairs perfectly with the Steiner H6Xi 2-12x42 scope.

Here is what comes in the box from Annex Defense:

The order in which the whole thing comes togethe is pretty stragihtforward:

-slide the thermal washer onto the threaded interface extending out of the back of the clip-on

-spin the mount itself onto the threaded interface (the mount is threaded on the inside) until it can go no further

-rotate the mount so that the clip-on is properly lined up to the picatinny clamp

-once you are happy with the alignment, use the three nylon tipped set screws (you'll need an allen wrench for that) to lock in the position of the clip-on in the mount.  You need very little torque on the set screws.  They are there for one reason and one reason only: to keep the mount from spinning when you tighten the timing nut in the next step

-spin the timing nut onto the threaded interface of the clip-on to lock the mount in place.  You should not need the timing nut wrench, but one is in there just in case.

Here are the pieces laid out in the order in which you will need them.

When you are done, it should look like this:

Note that the mount normaly comes with two T20 screws.  I am using two thumbscrews instead, since I am popping the mount on and off all the time.  It seems to be staying put with the thumbscrews just fine.  I am hoping Annex will offer the thumbscrews as an option.

It is not quite an equivalent of a QD mount, but we needed something with an extremely low profile clamp to fit under scopes with fairly large objectives.  As is, the mount works with most scope that have objective lens diameter of 50mm or less.

I am using with with Steiner H6Xi 2-12x42 and the two work together exceedingly well.

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Scoping Gas Guns
an interesting question that acme in via PM

I received this question via a private message and thought it was interesting enough to answer it in some detail.  I have been thinking a lot about appropriate optics for gas guns recently, so this came it at the right time.

 

Here is what I ahve been messing with last few days:

 

Above: 18" WOA barrel 5.56 AR-15 with Burris XTR PS 5.5-30x56 on it.

Below: 22" Satern barrel 224Valkyrie AR-15 with Delta Stryker 3.5-21x44 on it.


For obvious reasons, I am not posting who asked the question, but what I'll do is send him a link to this article, so that he gets an answer and we might have a good discussion.
Here is what I received:

Had a question for you
I have a Knights Armament SR25 6.5CM with a 14.5" barrel - I plan on shooting 100 - 600 yards at targets at 100 yd intervals
I am favoring the TT 315P with an Aimpont Acro mounted on top -( see you liked the TT315M) - would that be enough magnification?
I saw the SB SB 5-20 which offer more top end - I like the turrets on the Tanget and tooless Zero - what are your thoughts between the 2?
If I stayed 400 and under - how do you see the TT315P with the Acro Red dot against the SB 1-8 Short Dot (saw your review on that)

There isn't really enough information in the question for a simple answer, so let's consider a couple of options.

What is the gun for? 

For shooting medium range (out to 600) with occasional close range use?  If yes, go with a conventional scope and offset or piggybacked RDS.

For shooting at close distance with occasional med/long range use? If yes, so with a nice LPVO like the above mentioned S&B Short Dot 1-8x24 https://alnk.to/3J8vlFv.  It is quite capable at long range, but where it will really knock your socks off is up close and personal.

The question of what is enough magnification is pretty personal.  For me, 3-15x is plenty, but I shoot a lot off of the tripod and off of barricades which likely influences my decision.  For that, my 3-15x50 TT315M Tangent works great and 6mrad of elevation is plenty.  https://alnk.to/gVNkUXB  175gr #08 out of a shoter tube will drop in the 5 to 5.5mrad range at 600 yards.

For a dedicated long range semi-auto, other than the looks, there isn't much downside to a larger scope, which is why I set up Burris' XTR PS on the 5.56 AR pictured above.  It is for my son to learn to shoot at distance and to us in next year's BOTC match.  https://alnk.to/gp33YuR

If I were setting up an accurate semi-auto and wanted a high mag scope for it, I would likely lean toward March 4.5-28x52. https://alnk.to/dLjHgjh  It is compact, relatively light and very good optically for any use other than the dead of the night (for which we should be using clip-ons anyway).

S&B Short Dot is a very nice scope, but March is a newer design and, other than the lowest light, has an edge in terms of image fidelity and stray light control.

TT315P Tangent is a veyr ncie scope and toolles turrets are appealing.  However, there is a weight penalty to that.  For me, that was not worth it.  I ahve 5-25x56 and 7-35x Tangents and those toolless turrets are spectacular.  However, in a 3-15x50, I am quit ecomfortable with simpler 6mrad per turn knobs on the TT315M.

 

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A morning with a chronograph

When I tell people that I am using Hornady's factory ammo for matches, I get occasionally surprised looks.  Occasionally.  Most of the time, I get fairly condescending looks from handloaders who would not let a factory round pollute the chambers of their precision rifles if their lives depended on it.

To be fair, if I had the time, I might be reloading as well.  I might be able to do better than modern factory ammo, but the truth is that I am not a quarter MOA shooter, so a lot of that would be lost on me.  The UKD matches I fidn most interesting can be done by a competent shooter with a 1MOA gun.  I am working on that first part.  I reload when I have to, but if I can get factory ammo that's not outrageously expensive and that shoots well, I will go with that every time.

I looked around and realized that I have about 600 rounds of Hornady 147gr 6.5CM factory ammo from two lots.  400 rounds from one that I will use during the match later this month.  The remainder I will likely use up practicing prior to that.

I woke up early and snuck out to the range while my family was still asleep earlier today.

I set up in the 100 yard tunnel we have.  I took my four shots to zero with the lot I plan to use for the match.  Then I fired a six shot ~0.7MOA group.  That's accurate enough for my purposes.

Here are the chronograph results:

It is slow, but accurate and consistent.

Then I shot a five round group of Hornady 147gr ammo from the other lot.

Both of those lots are not too shabby for factory ammo.  POI was within 0.2mrad between the two lots, all laterally.  

 

I had some other ammo on hand, so I fired two five shot groups with Berger 144gr hybrid target ammo and Sako TRG 136gr.

Here is what I got for five rounds of Berger:

That's not a ton of statistics, but it is a data point.  The group was ~1.1MOA

 

Here the data for the Sako TRG 136gr ammo:

This ammo showed some mild pressure signs, but not too significant.  

Again, this is not a ton of data, but Hornady is looking pretty decent here.

I'll repeat the zero retention and consistency tests a couple more times between now and June 18th when we head to Wyoming.

I might pick up a couple more boxes of Hornady 147gr from a different lot to get some more data.

More to come.

 

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