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  2. NOBLEX E-Optics GmbH - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NOBLEX_E-Optics_GmbH

    NOBLEX E-Optics GmbH, formerly Docter Optics, is a German manufacturer of optics, including binoculars, rifle scopes, spotting scopes, red dot sights, flashlights and reading glasses. Its headquarters are in Eisfeld, Thuringia, Germany, where most of the products are developed and manufactured. Docter is part of the Analytik Jena Group. [1]

  3. Reflector sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflector_sight

    A view through a Tasco ProPoint red dot sight. The mid- to late 1970s saw the introduction of what are usually referred to as red dot sights, a type that gives the user a simple bright red dot as an aiming point. [27] The typical configuration for this sight is a compact curved mirror reflector design with a red light-emitting diode (LED) at ...

  4. Red dot sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_dot_sight

    A red dot sight is a common classification [1] for a non-magnifying reflector (or reflex) sight that provides an illuminated red dot to the user as a point of aim. A standard design uses a red light-emitting diode (LED) at the focus of collimating optics , which generates a dot-style illuminated reticle that stays in alignment with the firearm ...

  5. Bushnell Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushnell_Corporation

    The company was founded in 1948 by David P. Bushnell, when he returned to California from his honeymoon in Japan with two crates of binoculars and sold them by mail order. [2] Bushnell made precision binoculars affordable to middle-class Americans for the first time through a strategy of importing from manufacturers in Hong Kong , Taiwan , and ...

  6. Sight magnifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sight_magnifier

    This will also have the effect of magnifying the sight so the red dot or holographic reticle will appear larger as well. When flipped in, the user will also have to account for parallax and eye relief. The non-magnified optic and the magnifier is placed so that the user will have the correct amount of eye relief when looking through the ...

  7. Aimpoint CompM4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aimpoint_CompM4

    The U.S. Army's newest version of the M68 Close Combat Optic (CCO) is the Aimpoint CompM4. The shooter's end of the CompM4 with the power control knob An M4 carbine with a Picatinny rail system on the upper receiver and four-sided handguard, showing a GPS-02 "Grip Pod", a type of vertical grip that has a deployable bipod inside the handle and an M68 CCO optical sight C7NLD assault rifle with ...

  8. Holographic weapon sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_weapon_sight

    A United States Marine firing an M4 carbine, using an EOTech holographic sight to aim.. The first-generation holographic sight was introduced by EOTech—then an ERIM subsidiary—at the 1996 SHOT Show, [2] under the trade name HoloSight by Bushnell, with whom the company was partnered at the time, initially aiming for the civilian sport shooting and hunting market.

  9. List of modern equipment of the German Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_modern_equipment...

    2 [325] [326] Mobile cranes Grove GMK 4080-3 United States: Mobile crane: 7 (5 additional for Navy) 5 to be used by the German Navy, 7 to be used by the Joint Support Service. [327] Specifications: 70 tons lifting capacity; boom length is 51 meters; Liebherr. G-LTM 1090–4.2 "Liebherr Teleskop-Mobilkrane" Germany: Armoured Mobile crane: 38