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«-- Letter Re: Advice for Newbie on Food Dehydrating, Canning, and Storage | Main | Note from JWR: --» Letter Re: Night Vision Gear for a Long Term Collapse
Sir: JWR Replies: There are a couple of alternatives that I can suggest. First, is buying a brand new "low hours" Gen 2 or Gen 3 night vision scope that uses standard type AA batteries plus a spare intensifier tube, and of course plenty of spare batteries. My recommended suppliers for Starlight weapon sights and goggles are JRH Enterprises and Ready Made Resources. For full mil-spec units as well as spare intensifier tubes, talk to STANO Components. For additional rechargeable batteries at a discount price, contact All-Battery.com. As previously mentioned in SurvivalBlog, every well-prepared family should also have a small PV panel for battery charging. One lower technology alternative to Starlight technology, as described in
my novel
"Patriots",
is tritium-lit
scopes, such as those made by Trijicon.
I am often quoted as saying that I consider them "the next best thing to a
starlight scope." I still
do. We have six of these scopes
on our rifles here
at
the Rawles
Ranch, including three ACOGs. The
half-life of tritium
(a gaseous isotope of hydrogen) is 11.2 years, meaning that through
radioactive
decay they have one-half of their original brightness after
11.2 years. So the practical effective life of a tritium scope is
22 years, and the practical effective life of tritium
iron
sights is 33+ years. (The latter are much too bright for my liking when
new from the factory. We have three Colt M1911 series .45 ACP handguns that
were retrofitted with factory-fresh Trijicon iron sights in 1994. Now, some
13 years later, in my opinion they have
only just
now "mellowed"
(by
radioactive
decay) to the point that I consider them practical for tactical night shooting.
I probably won't have them replaced until around 2024. Trijicon scopes and
iron sights are available at quite competitive prices from CGW.
(One of our advertisers.) Tell them that Jim Rawles sent you. |
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