Was looking up some Meopta scopes and saw this information on their new dichroic reticle technology, has anyone seen this before? Sounds intriguing...
https://www.dichrotech.com/
https://www.dichrotech.com/
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Right PB, seems intuitive to the background, but I wonder if it really only works best with a duplex style reticle or if there is application for a mil based hash/christmas tree style, could you even see the thin line change color?Never seen anything like that before. Quite a beautiful idea if it works as advertized. Seems as if the reticle “knows” a color on the pallet to best suit the background, interesting technology.
It's always great to see representation from the mfr's, thanks for that note Erik, obviously hunting applications are first order but I'd be curious to see if their could be benefits to FFP as well.Hey everyone; just wanted to add a few thoughts to the discussion. First, we are very excited about this technology and hope you'll keep checking our website as we get closer to January! The most immediate application for this technology is low-light hunting. The current red dichroic reticle changes to an almost Hi-Viz green color in low light, allowing the reticle to be clearly visible to the user long after a standard black reticle would not be seen. Yes, there ae illuminated reticles for that as well, but this gives you a visible reticle without the potential for wash-out with a bright center dot. Also, because of the dichroic filtering, different wavelengths of color passing across the green reticle in low light could cause it to change back to red as seen in the still picture on the website. I have not had a chance yet to personally test this reticle out in a hunting or field setting, but from the time I have spent with it I noticed that the reticle changes color against the background of a black bullseye target, so there certainly could be other applications outside of hunting with different color/reticle configurations.
I want to see this on a R2 2.5-15x56 with a FFP small tree. Been waiting for a FFP R2 for awhile now. Whenever that arrives, I'm sold.
Or a Meotac, hopefully with more than a 4x zoom.
For the remainder of this year, the Dichroic Reticle is going to be made available in the R1 3-12x56 FFP and SFP. More options are definitely in the works, however...
Absolutely, illuminated reticles will always have a place. Dichroic reticles have the added advantage of, for lack of a more scientific word, messing with light to potentially reveal what may not have been clearly visible (think thick brush) where the filter can "mute" certain colors and bring others out more clearly. It is pretty interesting stuff!I find illuminated scopes with large objective lenses, on the low power settings, allow me to clearly see the game and center the reticle where I want it during the predawn or after sunset. I'm not saying this isn't useful and kewl, but it's not suddenly a solution to an unsolved problem in the hunting world. Maybe it's a better solution, but I can't think of a time I've missed a shot because of low light in at least ten years... Modern, illuminated, tier I scopes seem to handle handle low light situations exceedingly well. I've got no complaints with the illuminated NF and Vortex on my hunting rigs.
January 2019!Can't wait to see this. Jan 2019?
Dichroic filters are just mirrors that reflect certain wavelengths and allow others to pass through.
It would be interesting to know how they made only the lines on the reticle in to a filter but I'm slightly doubtful of the dusk effect image they have.
To make that happen you would need a filter that cuts the wavelengths between red and green and then the target and background would have to be very specific colors.
My bet is that the effect in normal situations is probably not terribly pronounced.
It might be useful on a TOW because the background is usually blue sky.