Know the color of your target and background
Recently I got into bow hunting and some of the bows they have out now are setup just like rifles are. The optics are as fancy as the stuff that Trijicon has out and I got a good crash course on green vs red reticles. Illumination is something that can bother me. I still have pretty good eyesight for my age and I really don’t like it when I have reticles that obscure my target or cause fuzz and haze. Many of the red dot optics just piss me off if I have to use them past 100yds. I do like my Eotech optics but am still looking for those skinny reticles.
The Trijicon TA01NSN is my favorite Trijicon ACOG and it is because it has nice skinny black lines and backup iron sights. The TA01 is the even simpliar version of the ACOG. These Trijicon Rifle Scopes have illumination when it is dark out but the bad thing about them is those nice thin black lines get lost on black clothing targets. How many bad guys wear black over in Iraq and Afghanistan? The vast majority of them. Not only can a red dot obscure your target your black lines will fade on a target too. A little bit of color contrast is a good thing for hunting and defense.












One of the most common issues I have seen with new Carbine students is their lack of knowledge about where their point of impact is at close ranges. I spoke with a student who could shoot his M4 out to 600yds with his ACOG, but did not know where his POI was at 50yds. Just about every 5.56 gun is going to be capable of hitting a man size target at 600yds, but the Carbine is really meant for close quarters combat. I’ve noticed a move away from magnification on many M4s because you really undermine your speed if you are relying on pin point accuracy from 100-600yds and don’t realize that you are completely missing a moving target that is 40yds away from you because you can’t track it.
It’s always up to the operator to determine which configuration works best for him, but with the reliance on battery operatored optics and high mounted optics, it’s really a good idea for a user to consider the what ifs. What do you do with your Eotech if the batteries die? What happens if the optics come loose ? Scope mounts can come loose and even break, I’ve seen this happen on M1A rifles, AK, FAL and AR15s on several ocassions. Sometimes its a good idea to train yourself to be able to hit a target without even a rear sight. There have been several times where I actually forgot to flip up my rear sights on my co-witness configuration and just used the sight picture from my Eotech optic and the front sight post. I never missed what I was aiming at and it was actually good practice for me.