Hi All,
Since early last year, we've spent a lot of time and effort meeting with manufacturers and testing products to find something that's a 'proper' value thermal rifle scope. Not just something that's cheap, with cheap specs and components to match.
We were hands down, most impressed with the Sytong AM03 35LRF. The very first thing noticed was no lag in the image and a completely intuitive user interface. I didn't have to ask how to operate it, including the ballistic calculator and all it's functions. On top of that, at the price point the specifications were far above the competition.
It's taken a while to bring to you as we had to work with Sytong and their engineers on some small tweaks to the firmware to make it suitable for the UK market, but we've finally got there.
The scope is a compact 35mm F1 lensed unit with a 20mk 384x288, 12 micron sensor, output to a very nice 1024x768 OLED display. The lens is a barrel focus to save cost, but being 35mm it doesn't really need adjusting once set for the night. Controls are easy. Power button on the right hand side and controls on the left. All the main features such as LRF/Ballistics on/off, zoom, pallete and recording are directly acessible from the side buttons. No menus are needed.

Here it is on the .22WMR with the standard mount.
If you want something posher to make use of the zero memories to use it on several rifles, then we also have QR mount options from Rusan and Innomount.
Performance in the field has been excellent. It is a genuine, honest 200 yard foxing scope (which is expected from the lens / sensor combination). I've got mine on a .22 WMR but it would be equally at home on an airgun or a centre fire. It's just not going to reliably ID foxes at 300+ yards for shooting that a 50mm+ lensed scope will.
Here's some video of the image at extended ranges, bear in mind the quality reduction from the digital recording vs. the eyepiece display:
In terms of image adjustment there is full control over image brightness, contrast and sharpness. There is also separate control of the OLED display output. It's very versatile.
More details can be found by visiting our website here:
Oh and the price...just £1250 and they are in stock for next day delivery.
Cheers
Clive
Since early last year, we've spent a lot of time and effort meeting with manufacturers and testing products to find something that's a 'proper' value thermal rifle scope. Not just something that's cheap, with cheap specs and components to match.
We were hands down, most impressed with the Sytong AM03 35LRF. The very first thing noticed was no lag in the image and a completely intuitive user interface. I didn't have to ask how to operate it, including the ballistic calculator and all it's functions. On top of that, at the price point the specifications were far above the competition.
It's taken a while to bring to you as we had to work with Sytong and their engineers on some small tweaks to the firmware to make it suitable for the UK market, but we've finally got there.
The scope is a compact 35mm F1 lensed unit with a 20mk 384x288, 12 micron sensor, output to a very nice 1024x768 OLED display. The lens is a barrel focus to save cost, but being 35mm it doesn't really need adjusting once set for the night. Controls are easy. Power button on the right hand side and controls on the left. All the main features such as LRF/Ballistics on/off, zoom, pallete and recording are directly acessible from the side buttons. No menus are needed.

Here it is on the .22WMR with the standard mount.
If you want something posher to make use of the zero memories to use it on several rifles, then we also have QR mount options from Rusan and Innomount.
Performance in the field has been excellent. It is a genuine, honest 200 yard foxing scope (which is expected from the lens / sensor combination). I've got mine on a .22 WMR but it would be equally at home on an airgun or a centre fire. It's just not going to reliably ID foxes at 300+ yards for shooting that a 50mm+ lensed scope will.
Here's some video of the image at extended ranges, bear in mind the quality reduction from the digital recording vs. the eyepiece display:
In terms of image adjustment there is full control over image brightness, contrast and sharpness. There is also separate control of the OLED display output. It's very versatile.
More details can be found by visiting our website here:
Sytong AM03 35LRF thermal rifle scope
www.nightvisionstore.co.uk
Oh and the price...just £1250 and they are in stock for next day delivery.
Cheers
Clive




