Description
Rifle Scope Product Details
UELEGANS 1×30 Compact Tactical Hunting Red Dot Sight with cemented Red Film Lens
Color: Matt Black
Diameter: 13.6×5.5×7.7cm
Material: Aluminium
Net weight 325g
Package Weight: 487g
Lens Coating: Fully Multi-Coated
Battery: CR2032(not included)
Click value moa@50yds: 1MOA
Adj. range moa@50yds: 45
Fit for: 20MM Picatinny rail mount
Package content
1x Hunting red dot sight with protect cap
1x Inclination Mount
1x Protective Plastic Box with Foam
1x Cleaning cloth
1x Allen key
Rifle Scope Product Features
The air gun sight is made of high-grade aluminum alloy, which is durable, light weight, and waterproof and shockproof. It can work normally in all weather conditions.
The adjustable airbrush red dot has 8 different brightness modes.
Suitable for 11mm / 20mm rails. The mount can be easily switched to 11mm and 20mm rails. Anti-glare reflective coated lens with good optical clarity.
Reflex sights have a flip-on lens cap. They protect your lens well when you are not using the scope
Airsoft sights with multi-coated lenses give you brighter, sharper images Ideal for fast shooting and moving targets with guns and crosses.
About the UELEGANS Brand
UELEGANS is a premium company for firearm scopes, optics, mounts, and other accessories used for guns like rifles and long guns. They innovate and manufacture their mounts, scopes, and related products by using materials which are long lasting and resilient. This includes the UELEGANS 1×30 Compact Tactical Hunting Red Dot Sight with cemented Red Film Lens by UELEGANS. For more shooting items, visit their site.
Facts About Optics
Rifle scopes enable you to precisely align a rifle at various targets by lining up your eye with the target over a range. They do this through magnifying the target by using a set of lenses within the scope. The scope’s alignment can be adjusted for consideration of various natural aspects like wind speed and elevation increases to account for bullet drop.
The scope’s purpose is to understand precisely where the bullet will land based upon the sight picture you are viewing using the optic as you align the scope’s crosshair or reticle with the target. A lot of modern-day rifle scopes have about 11 parts which are found inside and externally on the scope. These optic pieces include the rifle scope’s body, lenses, windage and elevation turrets, objective focus rings, and other components. See all eleven parts of optics.
Rifle Glass Varieties
Rifle scopes can be either “first focal plane” or “second focal plane” type of scopes. Choosing the perfect type of rifle optic depends on what type of shooting you plan to do.
About First Focal Plane Glass
First focal plane optics (FFP) include the reticle ahead of the magnifying lens. This causes the reticle to increase in size based on the extent of magnification being used. The outcome is that the reticle measurements are the same at the magnified distance as they are at the non magnified range. For instance, one tick on a mil-dot reticle at one hundred yards without “zoom” is still the corresponding tick at 100 yards using 5x “zoom”. These types of scopes work for:
- Quick acquisition, long distance kinds of shooting
- Shooting situations where calculations are marginal
- Experienced shooters who have an idea for their target “hold over” plus “lead” correlations for their long guns
- Shooters who do not mind the reticle is bigger and takes up more visual sight room than a SFP reticle
Second Focal Plane Optic Details
Second focal plane optics (SFP) come with the reticle to the rear of the magnification lens. In the FFP example with the SFP scope, the 5x “zoom” 100 yard tick reticle measurement would be 1/5th of the non “zoom” tick.
- Far away forms of shooting where shooters have additional time to make ballistic calculations
- Shooting where most shots occur within shorter ranges and proximities
- Shooters who want a clearer optic picture without room taken up by the bigger FFP reticle
Rifle Scope Magnification
The measure of scope zoom you need on your glass is based on the style of shooting you plan to do. Almost every kind of rifle scope gives some degree of magnification. The amount of zoom a scope gives is established by the diameter, thickness, and curves of the lens glass inside of the rifle optic. The zoom of the optic is the “power” of the opic. This signifies what the shooter is looking at through the scope is magnified times the power element of what can generally be seen by human eyes.
About Fixed Single Power Lens Optics
A single power rifle optic and scope will have a zoom number designator like 4×32. This indicates the magnification power of the scope is 4x power while the objective lens is 32mm. The magnification of this kind of scope can not adjust considering that it is a fixed power scope.
Adjustable Power Lens Rifle Scope Details
Variable power rifle scopes can be changed between magnification increments. It will list the zoom amount in a format like 2-10×32. These numbers imply the zoom of the scope could be changed in between 2x and 10x power. This always incorporates the power levels in-between 2 and 10. The power adaptation is accomplished using the power ring component of the scope near the back of the scope by the eye bell.
Power Levels and Range Correlations
Here are some suggested scope powers and the ranges where they may be successfully used. High power scopes will not be as effective as lower magnification level glass since too much zoom can be a negative aspect depending on your shooting distance. The same concept applies to longer ranges where the shooter needs to have adequate power to see where to properly aim the rifle.
Lens Coating for Rifle Scopes
All present day rifle optic and scope lenses are covered. Lens finish can be a crucial element of a shooting system when thinking about high end rifle optics and scope systems.
HD Versus ED Scope Lens Coatings
Some optic suppliers even use “HD” or high-definition glass coatings which employ various procedures, chemicals, aspects, and polarizations to draw out different color ranges and viewable definition through lenses. This high-def finishing is often used with increased density glass which brings down light’s chance to refract by means of the lens glass. Some scope manufacturers use “HD” to refer to “ED” implying extra-low dispersion glass. ED handles how colors are represented on the chromatic spectrum and the chromatic aberration which is also called color distortion or fringing. Chromatic aberration may be visible over objects with hard edges and outlines as light hits the object from particular angles.
Single Finish Versus Multi-Coating for Rifle Glass
Various optic lenses can even have different finishings applied to them. All lenses usually have at least some kind of treatment or finishing applied to them prior to being used in a rifle scope or optic assembly. This is due to the fact that the lens isn’t simply a raw piece of glass. It is part of the carefully tuned optic. It requires a coating to be applied to it so that it will be optimally functional in numerous kinds of environments, degrees of sunlight (full VS shaded), and other shooting conditions.
Single covered lenses have a treatment applied to them which is usually a protective and improving multi-purpose treatment. This lens treatment can preserve the lens from scratches while lowering glare and other less beneficial things experienced in the shooting environment while sighting in with the scope. The quality of a single layered lens depends upon the scope company and how much money you spent paying for it. Both the manufacturer and amount are indicators of the lens quality.
Some scope producers also make it a point to define if their optic lenses are covered or “multi” covered. Being “better” depends on the producer’s lens treatment innovation and the quality of products used in building the rifle scope.
About Anti-water Finish
Water on a lens does not help with preserving a clear sight picture through an optic in any way. Lots of top of the line and high-end scope manufacturers will coat their lenses with a hydrophobic or hydrophilic coating. The Steiner Optics Nano-Protection is a fine example of this kind of treatment. It deals with the exterior surfaces of the Steiner optic lens so the H2O particles can not bind to it or develop surface tension. The outcome is that the water beads slide off of the scope to preserve a clear, water free sight picture.
Options for Installing Scopes on Firearms
Installing options for scopes can be found in a few choices. There are the standard scope rings which are individually installed to the scope and one-piece mounts which cradle the scope. These various types of mounts also usually come in quick release variations which use manual levers which allow rifle shooters to rapidly install and remove the glass.
Optic Mounts with Hex Key Rings
Basic, clamp design mounting optic rings use hex head screws to install to the flattop design Picatinny scope mounting rails on the tops of rifles. These varieties of scope mounts use two independent rings to support the scope, and are normally constructed from 7075 T6 billet aluminum or similar materials which are manufactured for long distance accuracy shooting. This kind of scope mount is good for rifles which are in need of a long lasting, rock solid mount which will not change despite just how much the scope is moved or abuse the rifle takes. These are the style of mounts you should have for a faithful optics system on a reach out and touch someone hunting or competitors rifle that will hardly ever need to be modified or recalibrated. Blue 242 Loctite threadlocker can additionally be used on the mount screws to keep the hex screw threads from wiggling out after they are installed safely in position. An example of these mounting rings are the 30mm style from the Vortex Optics brand. The set generally costs around $200 USD
Quick-Release Cantilever Glass Rings
These types of quick-release rifle scope mounts can be used to rapidly remove a scope from a rifle and reattach it to a different rifle. If they all use a similar design mount, a number of scopes can also be switched in the field. The quick detach mount style is CNC machined from anodized 6061 T6 aluminum and the mounting levers fasten tightly to a flat top style Picatinny rail. This enables the scope to be sighted in while on the rifle, taken off of the rifle, and remounted while retaining the original sighting settings. These kinds of mounts are useful and practical for rifles which are transferred a lot, to take off the scope from the rifle for protection, or for sight systems which are adopted in between a number of rifles. An example of this mount style is the 30mm mount designed by the Vortex Optics brand. It normally costs around $250 USD
Glass Tube Sealing and Gas Purging
Moisture inside your rifle optic can destroy a day of shooting and your expensive optic by triggering fogging and creating residue inside of the scope tube. Many scopes avoid moisture from getting in the scope tube with a system of sealing O-rings which are waterproof.
Gas Purged Rifle Optic Tubes
Another component of avoiding the buildup of moisture within the rifle optic’s tube is filling the tube with a gas like nitrogen. Since this space is currently taken up by the gas, the scope is less influenced by temperature level alterations and pressure distinctions from the outdoor environment which could potentially allow water vapor to leak in around the seals to fill the vacuum which would otherwise exist. These are good qualities of a good rifle scope to seek out.