Category: Dr Shawley’s Blog

Chromatic Aberration

Chromatic Aberration

| April 14, 2010 | 0 Comments

Achromatism in scopes occurs because the refractive index of the glass (or the lenses, if you prefer) varies with wavelength. It sounds complicated, but you’ve seen it at work before – especially if you own Pink Floyd’s “The Dark Side of the Moon” album. As white light passes through a lens, it breaks into its [...]

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Tricks of the Trade

Tricks of the Trade

| April 7, 2010 | 0 Comments

Scope manufacturers get away with a lot when it comes to consumers. Most of it is sleight of hand marketing. Marketing gurus push positive aspects of a scope’s design without mentioning potential drawbacks. I thought I would take a few moments today to elucidate some of the more common tricks of the riflescope trade.

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Warne R.A.M.P.

Warne R.A.M.P.

| March 31, 2010 | 0 Comments

The Rapid Acquisition Multi-Sight Platform (R.A.M.P.) allows multiple optics to be mounted on your AR. Why be stuck with only one sight? Mount long-range glass on top and a fast acquisition sight on the side. The RAMP allows a small red dot sight to be placed under the ocular of a larger scope making target [...]

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Do Scopes Wear Out?

Do Scopes Wear Out?

| March 24, 2010 | 0 Comments

We all know that rifles can wear out. Firing pins fracture, barrels get shot out, and stocks swell and warp with time, but can scopes wear out? In a word, yes. Optics fog, glue cracks, nitrogen gas leaks, and springs wear out. Normally, scope issues are rather apparent. Cracked glass and foggy optics are easy [...]

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The Macbeth Test

The Macbeth Test

| March 17, 2010 | 0 Comments

At first I thought it was just another way to test my retention of Shakespeare’s Macbeth from high school. Fortunately, I didn’t have to remember what Banquo said about the seeds of time in Act I. The Macbeth test in this context pertains to optics. It is a test of color balance and consists of [...]

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The Perkinje Effect

The Perkinje Effect

| March 10, 2010 | 0 Comments

Low-light hunting involves more than just your scope, it involves your eyes. Our eyes contain rods and cones. We have one rod photopigment and three cone photopigments – all with different sensitivities. During the day, our three cone photopigments are in charge. This is referred to as photopic vision. During the black of night, our [...]

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