Total reviews

6603

Average rating

5
★★★★★ Excellent 6407
★★★★☆ Good 146
★★★☆☆ Medium 21
★★☆☆☆ Poor 7
★☆☆☆☆ Terrible 4

All reviews

Rating
5 years ago

great replica

I own one on my AR 15. Trijicon Acog on it, also it have the scan code on it, it is perfect replica. It came in the good using.it is worth to have one

5 years ago

Acog & rmr

I love my ACOGs with RMRs . It's superior I believe to having to reach up and twist a variable scope. However, putting the backup irons and red dot onto the same optic opens you up to having a single point of failure. I have had the two screws that hold the optic onto the mount loosen even with lock tight. When that happened you get zero drift on all the sights using that mount. Red dot and magnified optic I can see, but backup irons if you run them might be more appropriately put onto the rails.

5 years ago

Spec good

In 2005 I would say it was def one of the best. I see it as not really in the conversation now. With LPVO being popular and cheap is the ACOG still relevant? Mine has been in the box in the safe since I got my first accu-point. LPVOs just outclass them in capability. (up close, far away and everywhere in between.) I know many like them for their pedigree, and history and I can def understand that. I respect the original one, but also I like the competitive replica, few years ago I did have one, till now several Pcs. I consider the replica ACOG
Trijicon is similar as original nowadays, yes, Spec did.

5 years ago

competitive

A lot of people deride knock-off optics, and that's a fair play to an extent. But if all you want is a fixed magnification and a particular type of crosshair, sometimes knock-offs are the way to go. You're probably not going to be performing many drop tests with this piece, so who cares if it costs times less might sound a little tinny when you flick it?

5 years ago

Ansowe

Have one of these on a Crosman M-177 (pellet M4) works very well and looks awesome.

Follow us on Facebook