Between the 509 and acro I want to go acro. Half of that is for ownership of the company not being a Chinese one. 509 price and size are both sweet though.
Between the 509 and acro I want to go acro. Half of that is for ownership of the company not being a Chinese one. 509 price and size are both sweet though.
I think the Acro works well for field/duty type use. There are definitely better optics for competition. The shape of the Acro makes concealment harder for that application.
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie
Sounds like you’re making a decision. I understand and mostly sympathize on your Chinese point. But there are Americans who have jobs due to Holosun and other companies, say…Apple.
I forgot to mention Steiner. We have one guy running a 1st gen Steiner. He likes it. Battery life will have to be considered. But the ACRO and Trij offerings run 2032s. My personal ACRO is about 11 months on 1st battery, but I have not run it on all the time. If nothing goes down, I’ll change batteries New Years.
“Ya pays ya money,” etc.
Add editnot George) I conceal a 19MOS w/ACRO P-2 in a JMCK IWB holster. Can’t say enough good things about Tony’s creations. But I don’t feel real badly about running other sights. I have an EPS “Carry” on a 43X and like it. Still, forced to pick one= ACRO.
YMMV
Last edited by 1Rangemaster; 11-25-2022 at 12:59 PM. Reason: Concealment comment
There was actually a video on Instagram that Mike Pannone posted a little while back where he was teaching an LE optics class. He was discussing occluded optic shooting and then demonstrated it. I was impressed because he doesn’t have binocular vision due to the loss of his right eye.
POI shifts while shooting occluded is also the big clue I’ve seen that someone might not have binocular vision even if they have two eyes and they might not know they have a vision issue.
My posts only represent my personal opinion and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or official policies of any employer, past or present. Obvious spelling errors are likely the result of an iPhone keyboard.