Tuesday, September 10, 2024
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    Product Review: Vortex Viper Red Dot and an AK are a potent mix

    As I have mentioned before in this column, co-witnessing your red dot on an AK is the equivalent of discovering the Holy Grail.

    It just doesn’t happen very often and when it does, it’s exceeding satisfying. For better or worse the geometry of the AK sighting system does not lend it self to easily co-witnessing with a red dot. After all, it was designed just after the end of the Second World War. When you add a red to an AK, usually the rails or scope mount are seated just too high to afford a co-withness. This is particularly an issue with tube type red dots such as the Aimpoint or other similar sights.

    However reflex sights can be mounted super-low and they can more easily do the job.

    Image processed by CodeCarvings Piczard ### FREE Community Edition ### on 2016-05-03 21:11:56Z | |
    The Viper is minuscule and won’t upset the balance of your rifle if you place it on the fore end.

    Being able to use a red dot on a forward rail is a huge advantage.

    Unlike a tube type optic, Viper’s reflex technology will not cause eye relief problems if the sight is mounted far from the eye. In other words, mounting the sight on a rail over the gas tube, near the front sight, is not an impediment. You can easily see the dot without straining your eye in the least. In fact because the dot is further away from the eye, it’s going to look crisper than one mounted closer to your eye.

    You could use this sight closer to the eye, but in my opinion it’s just as effective mounted further away. With this perspective you also can gauge what’s going on around you rather than just being focused on the optic.

    Furthermore, because it’s so light, it’s not going to interfere with the balance of your rifle by making it “top heavy”.

    The Viper has been out for a few years and Vortex has gotten all the kinks out. What I like about it is that there are the locks up front so that once you’ve dialed it in, you can nail down the windage and elevation.

    Mine came with a 6 MOA arrangement which will work well with a rifle shooting at steel but not as well if you’re shooting at a bullseye on a paper target. Better to get the 3 MOA for precision work.

    I was able to easily co-witness on the mini-rail on this Krebs Custom. You can also use the RS Regulate mount.

    The left-side up/down power and illumination controls are easy to manipulate and the whole shebang runs on a CR2032 battery. It comes with a base that mounts on a pic rail. The only thing I didn’t like was that you have to detach the mount in order to replace the battery. The good news is that the battery will last up to 30k hours so you’re not going to have to do this too often.

    Another attractive item is the Vortex “VIP” warranty.  They will repair or replace your Vortex product in the event it becomes damaged or defective—at no charge to you. If they cannot repair it, they will replace it with a product in perfect working order of equal or better physical condition. Pretty unbeatable.

    I also called their tech support to sound them out and was impressed. They were patient and I got someone right away. No waiting. This may have been a fluke but that was my experience.

    If you need a decent quality, lightweight red dot for your rifle, this will work just fine. At $229 on Amazon, it’s not going to break the bank, and, it’s a good value.

    Deep climate crises Angst

    1

    Who cares if global warming is a hoax?

    What if we built a better world, based on renewable energy and food security and justice for all, yet were wrong about man-made global warming?

    Would it be worth it?

    Would you rather follow an inconvenient truth to a better world, tomorrow or,
    believe a convenient lie that makes you feel good, today?

    In 2007, I was selected to teach and mentor others about climate change and the enormous potential and promise of our collective future. I reach out to you tonight with inspiration and angst of 10-years of presentations, scheduling, preparing, pleading, persuading, creating sustainability conversations around dinner tables, in churches, schools, government offices, private business conference rooms, in Africa, California, Hawaii, everywhere I could go I went, I spoke to whomever would listen.

    School children, government workers, high net worth investors, politicians, women’s groups, professionals and blue collar, farmers and philanthropists. I’ve spent thousands of hours in preparation and presentation and several hundred thousands of dollars funding campaigns out of my own pockets on close to 100 public and private talks.

    Today, in 2017, deep in the second decade of the 21st century — not one funder, corporation or institution finds this work valuable—in my opinion, because it adds nothing to their return-on-investment. Even allies, such as universities, or NGOs whose missions one might believe are aligned with this work seem disinterested. How about politicians? Not interested. Not enough bandwidth. Too worried about re-election. Sad. Granting organizations? Not really, not at the scale necessary for societal change, for survival, to thrive. Simply MIA in their ivory towers.

    And so, here we are 10-years later still arguing whether the boundaries, tipping points and limits to growth, to unchecked consumption racing towards us, are real? Still we fritter and waste the hours in an off-hand way arguing with catastrophe capitalists about whether they should be able to make a great big profit from Nature’s ecosystems and the collapse from centuries of pollution of our only planet? We argue about balance, doubt and uncertainty, despite our brittle, ineffective experiences dealing with complexity in an exponential world. Plead and beg philanthropists to give up some of the hoards of dollars sitting in their accounts to build resilience in our communities and valleys.

    I challenge anyone who has more than $1M in their bank account to step into society and start spending on social improvement. Mentor a promising youth in your neighborhood. Sponsor a budding social entrepreneur, spend more on others than you spend on yourself. Those of us doing this work, building social resilience and improving society with campaigns are spending 100-115% of our annual income into the economy. Surely, wealthy person, you can do more, surely you can take more risks with your finances. You have so much—much is expected of you in return.

    Rise up folks. Especially the children, Gen X, Millennials, Gen Z, Everyone on-board, please…. It can’t just be a few of us doing this work of waking our people from the slumber of consumerism. Wake up Boomers, wake up!


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    Think Tech: Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker – Qtrly Commentary

    This show was my Quarterly Commentary with Attorney Steve Pingree. Hot topics include immigration and tax reform.

    Think Tech: Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker and OHA Trustee Akina

    This current show was interesting to say the least!

    Trustee Akina and I spoke on a variety of issues facing Hawaii and the business community.

    Think Tech: Business in Hawaii With Reg Baker & Healthcare in Hawaii

    Healthcare challenges are not going away and getting worse in Hawaii. Here is an update covering many of the challenges.

    Think Tech: Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker & The Maui Chamber

    The Maui Chamber of Commerce rocks!  They have so much going on and so many events.  Get caught up on all that the Maui Chamber offers in this weeks Business in Hawaii show with Reg Baker.