01-07-2007, 19:20
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#1
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 169
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Schmidt Bender Short Dot
Are any of you using these? Opinions?
My take:
Pluses - Awesome glass, true multi-task optic, tough.
Minuses: EXPENSIVE, heavy.
In a Larue mount, with the #7 reticle ... it's the shizzle for a cop sniper's AR.
BK
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"The police exist to protect the innocent, not grant latitude to the guilty. One cannot negotiate ... with evil"
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brianksain is offline
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01-07-2007, 20:32
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#2
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: LA
Posts: 1,653
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What are you running it on?
__________________
Somewhere a True Believer is training to kill you. He is training with minimal food or water, in austere conditions, training day and night. The only thing clean on him is his weapon and he made his web gear. He doesn't worry about what workout to do - his ruck weighs what it weighs, his runs end when the enemy stops chasing him. This True Believer is not concerned about 'how hard it is;' he knows either he wins or dies. He doesn't go home at 17:00, he is home.
He knows only The Cause.
Still want to quit?
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NousDefionsDoc is offline
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01-08-2007, 19:12
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#3
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 169
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by NousDefionsDoc
What are you running it on?
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Sorry NDD, overlooked your question. Apologies.
Currently on a Colt 6920 but may be on either a Larue or MSTN build after SHOT SHOW.
Sure like the look of the first Mod SPR ... thinking of having Wes at MSTN build the same only with a 16" bbl. Kind of an SPR carbine/Recce.
Handy as a hatchet I would think.
BK
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"The police exist to protect the innocent, not grant latitude to the guilty. One cannot negotiate ... with evil"
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brianksain is offline
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01-07-2007, 20:40
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#4
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BANNED USER
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,189
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Snipers/AR ??
Quote:
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Originally Posted by brianksain
Are any of you using these? Opinions?
My take:
Pluses - Awesome glass, true multi-task optic, tough.
Minuses: EXPENSIVE, heavy.
In a Larue mount, with the #7 reticle ... it's the shizzle for a cop sniper's AR.
BK
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How many cops use an AR as a "Sniper Rifle" ???.................wouldn't an Remington 700, or H&K PSG be the rifle of choice for SWAT/SRT snipers ???
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82ndtrooper is offline
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01-07-2007, 21:06
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#5
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 261
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Short Dot
I love the (MILSPEC) version of the Short-Dot with one exception: eye relief is critical (too close or too far and you get severe shadowing).
I've found the best mount for it is probably the Larue.
Dave
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Sinister is offline
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01-07-2007, 21:20
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#6
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Free Pineland
Posts: 24,825
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Sinister
I love the (MILSPEC) version of the Short-Dot with one exception: eye relief is critical (too close or too far and you get severe shadowing).
I've found the best mount for it is probably the Larue.
Dave
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The LaRue SPR mount?
TR
__________________
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat." - President Theodore Roosevelt, 1910
De Oppresso Liber 01/20/2025
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The Reaper is offline
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01-07-2007, 22:52
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#7
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Finland
Posts: 400
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Having used the Short Dot at ranges from 1 - 350 metres. The optic quality is typical excellent S&B quality. At ranges from 1-100 metres the sight is very fast to use. But, due to to the reticle being in the first focal plane and the reticle type, the field of view is "busy" at longer ranges than 100 m, especially on smaller or or badly visible targets.
The new 1.1-4x24 Zenith Short Dot LE, in essense a Short Dot II, should be arriving here in a matter of weeks. It has a slightly longer tube and most importantly, the reticle is in the second focal plane and the reticle is also the FD7.
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RECON - Always a step ahead
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Tuukka is offline
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01-07-2007, 23:08
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#8
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Asset
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Bladen County NC
Posts: 24
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Brian, great to see you here. I get my gear intel at 10-8 Forums (where I've been lurking forever, someday I'll scan my ID and ask to be let in). When I bought my patrol carbine last year and had enough ching to get any optic I wanted, I knew from 10-8 that I had to move heaven and earth to find a Short Dot. I'm only a part-time auxiliary deputy and have to come up with my own equipment, and I'll only need a rifle once in the next 20 years probably, but that one time, I'll really need it. I had to call literally a dozen Schmidt & Bender dealers to find the only factory-new Short Dot in-country last August, and I'm glad I did.
It works very much as advertised and the only problem is that when it goes from a cold car trunk to a warm humid building, the lenses fog over as would any scope. No prob--just use the sling to lever off the LaRue SPR-E, flip up the iron, and drive on. At first I had my Short Dot in a regular SPR, but my Neanderthal eyebrows were colliding with the scope tube, so I went with the -E. I've mounted and dismounted probably 50 times without losing zero.
I have the CQB reticle with the mil dots, actually hashes, in the center. With 11 illumination detents on the rheostat, the red dot is visible in any light. 8 is the default setting, 7 is better for night, 9 for bright day. I looked through a Nightforce 1-4x in daylight and could hardly tell which part of the reticle was supposed to have been illuminated. Not so with the Short Dot--you can see that dot anywhere. With the dot off, the reticle itself is good to go during daylight, or at night with my SureFire 910 white light.
I'm no LE sniper, and 82ndtrooper is right that precision marksmen are better off with Rem 700s etc. (very few departments have or can afford a $9,000 H&K PSG), and my carbine is a Smith M&P-15 M4gery with the service-grade chrome-lined barrel--not the epitome of tackdrivers. However, in our rural county, SWAT is what you do to flies when you are trying to sleep. Whoever's on duty must handle whatever goes down, with whatever is in the patrol car. So, I occasionally work on head shots at 100m, at low and high magnification, dot on or off, with both duty loads and match loads. Especially with the latter, I'm confident that if Johnny Jihad shows up with a bulky vest, I can interrupt his train of thought while staying out of range of flying nuts and bolts.
I took Larry Vickers' basic carbine class in October and my Short Dot helped me fire quickly while actually HITTING STUFF, which Larry seems to feel is important for some reason. He is also the one who pushed S&B to give us the Short Dot in the first place. When we backed up to the 100yd line, he acknowledged that those who had irons, EOTechs, Aimpoints etc. might be at a disadvantage to those who had scopes, but that's life in the big city. I agreed, as I cranked the ring to 4x. One of the other guys took a long look through my Short Dot and exclaimed in wonder, "it's so CLEAR!" That's the best thing you can say about a piece of glass.
I can live with the weight because I know it adds to durability and waterproofing. Only two picky things would I change: keep the dot small at all magnifications because on 4x it covers too much space, and extend the auto dot shutoff to 12 or better yet 24 hours so I can turn it on at the beginning of the shift and know it'll be there later. As it is, I have to remember to tell the deputy I'm riding with to "whoa, pop the trunk, I gotta turn my scope back on." Sight alignment and trigger control works with any sight, but you're only as good as your equipment allows you to be, and I'll take all the help I can get.
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FearTheCats is offline
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01-16-2007, 15:21
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#9
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Ireland
Posts: 150
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Sinister
I love the (MILSPEC) version of the Short-Dot with one exception: eye relief is critical (too close or too far and you get severe shadowing).
I've found the best mount for it is probably the Larue.
Dave
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The shadowing is a problem on the 6x42 also..
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Irish_Army01 is offline
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01-08-2007, 08:41
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#10
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: LA
Posts: 1,653
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by 82ndtrooper
How many cops use an AR as a "Sniper Rifle" ???.................wouldn't an Remington 700, or H&K PSG be the rifle of choice for SWAT/SRT snipers ???
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Not necessarily. You might want to watch this discussion for a while. You may learn something.
Tone is hard to determine on the internet, so I am wondering why you put quotation marks around sniper rifle. And if you really want to discuss the way they do things, I've found they respond better to "LEOs" than "cops".
Now, if you have a question reference the S&B Short Dot sight, feel free to ask. If you want a class on Selection of Sniper Weapons Systems for Law Enforcement use in the United States, start another thread. I'm sure Brian and others will be glad to assist.
__________________
Somewhere a True Believer is training to kill you. He is training with minimal food or water, in austere conditions, training day and night. The only thing clean on him is his weapon and he made his web gear. He doesn't worry about what workout to do - his ruck weighs what it weighs, his runs end when the enemy stops chasing him. This True Believer is not concerned about 'how hard it is;' he knows either he wins or dies. He doesn't go home at 17:00, he is home.
He knows only The Cause.
Still want to quit?
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NousDefionsDoc is offline
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01-08-2007, 11:09
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#11
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BANNED USER
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,189
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Precision Marksman
Quote:
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Originally Posted by NousDefionsDoc
Not necessarily. You might want to watch this discussion for a while. You may learn something.
Tone is hard to determine on the internet, so I am wondering why you put quotation marks around sniper rifle. And if you really want to discuss the way they do things, I've found they respond better to "LEOs" than "cops".
Now, if you have a question reference the S&B Short Dot sight, feel free to ask. If you want a class on Selection of Sniper Weapons Systems for Law Enforcement use in the United States, start another thread. I'm sure Brian and others will be glad to assist.
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Tone was not intended to be sarcastic, merely that designating an AR as a precision rifle intended for "Sniper" use would appear to be a poor choice, unless that rifle was a Crane/Knights Mk12 or Mk11 SPR system. The average Leo carries an Armalite or Bushmaster. As was stated, not the epitome of precision rifles for longer distance precision fire. The task could, I suppose, be done with an AR, but with an AR platform that was task designated for "Sniper" use utilizing a Harris bi-pod and higher powered glass, a heavy bull type barrel and most likely a Leopold. But, this would not be an entry weapon system platform. Hence the question of the use of the AR as a designated sniper system.
Would the S&B Short Dot be the best choice for a sniper ?? From what I've read and it's design specs, It wouldn't be my first choice for sniper duty. But, then again, I'm only speaking from the aspect of my hunting experience with high powered scopes and limited experience with red dots and hollowgraphics. So yes, I'm out of my depth with a multi task optic. It would seem that for the cost of the S&B Short Dot, a police dept could purchase two AR's and Two ACOG's for the cost of two S&B's.
Last edited by 82ndtrooper; 01-08-2007 at 11:14.
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82ndtrooper is offline
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01-08-2007, 11:23
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#12
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: LA
Posts: 1,653
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I believe the average engagement distance for police marksmen is somewhere around 75 meters.
__________________
Somewhere a True Believer is training to kill you. He is training with minimal food or water, in austere conditions, training day and night. The only thing clean on him is his weapon and he made his web gear. He doesn't worry about what workout to do - his ruck weighs what it weighs, his runs end when the enemy stops chasing him. This True Believer is not concerned about 'how hard it is;' he knows either he wins or dies. He doesn't go home at 17:00, he is home.
He knows only The Cause.
Still want to quit?
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NousDefionsDoc is offline
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01-08-2007, 11:30
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#13
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BANNED USER
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,189
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Marksmen
Quote:
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Originally Posted by NousDefionsDoc
I believe the average engagement distance for police marksmen is somewhere around 75 meters.
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With that distance, then an AR should be just fine. As for the use of the S&B, that's another question. Parallax and eye relief would be my first concern, even at 75 meters. In daylight, I'd want a 4x with 1/4 MOA and a rather large objective lens adjustable to varying distance. I'm relating this to hunting game, not any experience as a military or LEO sniper duty. The targets are both organic and moving none the less.
Last edited by 82ndtrooper; 01-08-2007 at 14:06.
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82ndtrooper is offline
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01-08-2007, 11:35
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#14
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: In transit somewhere
Posts: 4,044
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by NousDefionsDoc
I believe the average engagement distance for police marksmen is somewhere around 75 meters.
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NDD-
If 75m is the range for most engagements, lots of practice wit hiron sights at ranges over that (100-200m) would be great to get the muscle memory prior to fitting optics, wouldn't it. Actually at that range, you could throw your pointy stick with the nail and get 80% accuracy. I'm way out of practice, and a bit old school - but still think that good iron sight marksmanship, to train yourslelf to get a good picture is crucial before moving over to optics, create the good habits prior to adding technology.
just my .02, fire away.
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In the business of war, there is no invariable stategic advantage (shih) which can be relied upon at all times.
Sun-Tzu, "The Art of Warfare"
Hearing, I forget. Seeing, I remember. Writing (doing), I understand. Chinese Proverb
Too many people are looking for a magic bullet. As always, shot placement is the key. ~TR
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x SF med is offline
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01-08-2007, 09:30
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#15
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by brianksain
Are any of you using these? Opinions?
My take:
Pluses - Awesome glass, true multi-task optic, tough.
Minuses: EXPENSIVE, heavy.
In a Larue mount, with the #7 reticle ... it's the shizzle for a cop sniper's AR.
BK
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Do you want a marksman or an assaulter?
Expecting both with a "multi-task optic" IMO is not a good idea. Especially with the amount of training (or lack thereof) some departments accomplish yearly.
Assault, support & security.
Why don't we make all the assaulters marksmen and wait the bad-guys out?  (oops, we tried that at WACO)
FearTheCats,
I'm no LE sniper, and 82ndtrooper is right that precision marksmen are better off with Rem 700s etc. (very few departments have or can afford a $9,000 H&K PSG),
Very few departments require/need an HK "PSG". 99.99% of the countries LEO's would do just fine with bolt guns sold at Wal-Mart.
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Team Sergeant is offline
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