I run both Romeo 5 and MSR due to budget, so far so good.
Slap a few extra batteries into your MOE grip - Don’t forget back up iron sights, and zero the optic, then zero your iron sights to that, just in case your red dot pulls a Biden and shits itself
I have a Romeo 5. For the price, it’s hard to beat. I wouldn’t take it to the mountains of Effin tora bora, but for civilian use, it’s really a great optic for the price. Glass is very clear, dot is very clean. And it is really hard to damage. Alabama arsenal did a torture test on it. Check that video out.
It’s better than the MSR, but slightly more money - on two rifles I actually have the “Romeo and Juliet”, that includes the 3X magnifier. They are Easy to turn on/off and adjust, the windage/elevation screw caps have little mini “nubs” to use for adjustments, so no tools needed to adjust windage/elevation.
I use the MSR on my cheaper builds, great reviews, seem to be pretty sturdy, not as user friendly nor as many features as the Romeo.
I have never “drop tested” either, I tend to not take my guns and throw them on the ground. If I recall the 5 and MSR run diff batteries.
Sweet! Nice pistol...
I run both Romeo 5 and MSR due to budget, so far so good.
Slap a few extra batteries into your MOE grip - Don’t forget back up iron sights, and zero the optic, then zero your iron sights to that, just in case your red dot pulls a Biden and shits itself
I have a Romeo 5. For the price, it’s hard to beat. I wouldn’t take it to the mountains of Effin tora bora, but for civilian use, it’s really a great optic for the price. Glass is very clear, dot is very clean. And it is really hard to damage. Alabama arsenal did a torture test on it. Check that video out.
Absolutely. I have an Aimpoint pro and the Sig beats it in battery life
I have 6 or 7, on all my Sig uppers.
It’s better than the MSR, but slightly more money - on two rifles I actually have the “Romeo and Juliet”, that includes the 3X magnifier. They are Easy to turn on/off and adjust, the windage/elevation screw caps have little mini “nubs” to use for adjustments, so no tools needed to adjust windage/elevation.
I use the MSR on my cheaper builds, great reviews, seem to be pretty sturdy, not as user friendly nor as many features as the Romeo.
I have never “drop tested” either, I tend to not take my guns and throw them on the ground. If I recall the 5 and MSR run diff batteries.