Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 13, 2019 (edited) Cooty and Dave, those are very kind offers, much appreciated. I will decline incase I damaged one but very touched gents. I understand the quality issue but let's be clear I don't want to see it's whiskers at range. I just want to identify it, keep a tab on it location and move closer. I don't want to shoot via it really just get closer and take the shot conventionally. Is this feasible? Edited August 13, 2019 by Sausagedog 1 Quote Link to post
David.evans 5,323 Posted August 13, 2019 Report Share Posted August 13, 2019 Your right BC i put the Solaris srx with mine and the distance is a lot more but even with the built in ir I can see 200 on 3x atb Quote Link to post
Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 13, 2019 1 hour ago, tomsmurf said: This something I never thought I'd hear you consider!! Shush you Quote Link to post
Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 13, 2019 1 minute ago, David.evans said: Your right BC i put the Solaris srx with mine and the distance is a lot more but even with the built in ir I can see 200 on 3x atb So you could move in on a fox without flashing a red or amber torch? Quote Link to post
David.evans 5,323 Posted August 13, 2019 Report Share Posted August 13, 2019 Yes mate you’ve more chance with IR than any kind of torch atb 2 Quote Link to post
ianm 2,594 Posted August 14, 2019 Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 (edited) 14 hours ago, Sausagedog said: So you could move in on a fox without flashing a red or amber torch? Not quite, i/r in the 850nm spectrum gives off a red glow and the more powerful led's give off even more of a glow. 940nm is invisible but the range is dramatically reduced, so much so that it renders it useless for your application. The most covert would be to use a modern 500mw laser i/r as the signature given off these is so slight a fox will not notice it. However you must think about what you are doing with one as they are very dangerous for the eyes. You must not look into one directly and take care you aren't shining it at something close quarters that will reflect the light back at you (remember you cannot see the light with the naked eye). Edited August 14, 2019 by ianm Quote Link to post
Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 36 minutes ago, ianm said: Not quite, i/r in the 850nm spectrum gives off a red glow and the more powerful led's give off even more of a glow. 940nm is invisible but the range is dramatically reduced, so much so that it renders it useless for your application. The most covert would be to use a modern 500mw laser i/r as the signature given off these is so slight a fox will not notice it. However you must think about what you are doing with one as they are very dangerous for the eyes. You must not look into one directly and take care you aren't shining it at something close quarters that will reflect the light back at you (remember you cannot see the light with the naked eye). Stuff that, my eyes are failing without any help from a laser! Covert! I fully intend to give a fox the biggest shock of its life! Surely a dull red IR emitter is less intrusive than a bright normal light? I may be accused of over simplifying things buddy but....... Quote Link to post
ianm 2,594 Posted August 14, 2019 Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 3 minutes ago, Sausagedog said: Stuff that, my eyes are failing without any help from a laser! Covert! I fully intend to give a fox the biggest shock of its life! Surely a dull red IR emitter is less intrusive than a bright normal light? I may be accused of over simplifying things buddy but....... Led i/r is not dull red and the more powerful ones which are more like 810nm certainly aren't covert. What i am trying to say is if your fox is lamp shy it will "foxtrot oscar" as soon as it see's a led i/r. If you are dealing with lamp shy foxes a spotter equiped with a led i/r may well not give you the advantage you think it will. Been there done that! 2 Quote Link to post
Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 3 minutes ago, ianm said: Led i/r is not dull red and the more powerful ones which are more like 810nm certainly aren't covert. What i am trying to say is if your fox is lamp shy it will "foxtrot oscar" as soon as it see's a led i/r. If you are dealing with lamp shy foxes a spotter equiped with a led i/r may well not give you the advantage you think it will. Been there done that! Ok, think I understand. So is a normal IR led as bright as my red led torch ? 1 Quote Link to post
Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 4 minutes ago, David.evans said: No Thought so Dave. I'm only looking for/considering an alternative method to how I approach fox's observed in the field. I'm thinking ahead and possibly using a shotgun more often. So a called in but hesitant wise old fox won't be subject to bright light. So may just come in. I understand shooting them at long range by my siblings but I don't do that anymore Quote Link to post
David.evans 5,323 Posted August 14, 2019 Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 I would think it may well be SD I’d day it’s bound to see some kind of torch shined in its mush , and if you can get him into SG range your doing well mate only one way to find out 1 Quote Link to post
si brown 8,486 Posted August 14, 2019 Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 Rabbits rats and foxes all catch on to the ir glow sd... I’ve been using mine as a spotter so once I clock one I cover the ir up with me hand an go into sneak mode and finish them off with the lamp! this is why the lads that can afford thermal use them 3 Quote Link to post
Sausagedog 7,381 Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 28 minutes ago, si brown said: Rabbits rats and foxes all catch on to the ir glow sd... I’ve been using mine as a spotter so once I clock one I cover the ir up with me hand an go into sneak mode and finish them off with the lamp! this is why the lads that can afford thermal use them Ah, that's exactly what I was thinking of, excellent Quote Link to post
PLEDGEY 495 Posted August 14, 2019 Report Share Posted August 14, 2019 21 hours ago, ianm said: You don't need i/r with proper dedicated gen3 or gen 2+. The Starlight Archer is proper Gen 3, but it's not 10 grands worth. https://www.optics-trade.eu/blog/ir-illuminators/ Quote Link to post
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