Alpha 3 Red Dot Optic Review Thread!

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We would be happy to hear from our customers who care to share a review about the Alpha 3 Red Dot optics in this thread!

We also have started a new customer review program where we will offer a discount to the first ten people that want to participate and give us an honest review of the Alpha 3 optic. If you are interested in doing that, please send us an email to sales@fasttoys.net. We will also post reviews here as they come in:
 
This review is something I have meant to do for some time. I initially was drawn to the FTP Alpha 3 by the larger optic window at a competitive price. I had run Cmore RTS2 optics for a long time and was happy with them. I just wanted a larger window and didn’t want to change my optic mounts out.

The FTP Alpha3 performance is excellent. I now have three; all are 8 MOA dots. I have two version 2s and one version 3. The version 3 upgraded to a lockable battery tray. I personally have never had an issue with any battery trays, but I’ve seen shooters on the range using pasters, etc., to keep their optic battery trays closed.

I was very surprised by the optic brightness of the Alpha3. I live in Florida and the sun will easily show the quality of your optic. I’ve never experienced dot washout with the Alpha3.

My club runs a Thursday night match, and in the winter with the time change, we shoot under stadium lights. The Alpha3 allows you to turn the dot down sufficiently so as to not bloom in low light settings.

I have between 10-20,000 rounds on each of the version 2 optics and about 7,500 on the version 3. I have never had an issue with the optics. I shoot with plenty of guys who run optics twice the price of the Alpha3, and they have returned their optics for warranty issues. While their manufacturers have warranteed the optics, it is bad when your optic fails at a match. The inconvenience of sending in your optic for warranty—and I have seen guys wait 8 weeks to get them back—is huge. I have had zero issues with the Alpha3; no zero drift, no button issue, no dot failure, no broken battery trays, etc. Competition shooting tests optics strenously, and I shoot about 20-25,000 rounds a year. The Alpha3 performs!

With the recent introduction of the provisional “Limited Optics” division in USPSA, I pulled my limited gun out of the safe and had a Limited Optics 9mm top end built. When I had the top end built, I considered a new Alpha3 for it. I chose to go with the Cmore RTS2. This is the only gun I am not running an Alpha3 on. One reason was because I had a few used RTS2’s laying around. The biggest reason was the body of the Alpha3 was longer than the RTS2. So your slide optic cut needed to be slightly longer. I didn’t want to do this because it would leave less material behind the pistol breach face. Well, FTP just recently came out with the Alpha3 “Short Body” for slide ride mount applications.

In closing the Alpha3 is a great optic choice with a large window, excellent glass quality, crisp dot, full sun brightness, excellent battery life, lockable battery tray and is now available in a “short body” option. The Alpha3 doesn’t lack any features of competitive optics at twice the price. I couldn’t be more pleased with this optic.

John Florit
USPSA Open Division Master class
 
I have over thirty years of competitive experience shooting red dot sights. Started with a heavily modified Tasco PDP3, then moved to a C-More, then the FTP Alpha series. Currently I have six competition firearms all with Alpha II or Alpha III dots. Two open 9mm pistols (8moa), production optics 9mm (6moa, aim small miss small), steel challenge/PCC 9mm (8moa), steel challenge .22 rifle (8moa) and steel challenge .22 pistol (10moa specifically to really do in Smoke ‘n Hope). And a spare 6moa that will likely end up on my 625 once I find a mount for it.

So the obvious question “ you have SEVEN FTP Alpha dots…why?” The answer is simple. The FTP Alpha’s represent the best compromise between cost and performance for any optic that I have tried. I have tried/owned RTS’s, RTS2’s, Vortex, Doctor, Fast Fires, Romeo’s, Trijicon, Aimpoint, and probably a dozen or so knock-off and off-brand dots. There is a saying when it comes to optics “you get what you pay for” – nice optics are expensive, there really is no getting around that. In the case of the FTP Alpha’s, there is enough noticeable difference over a dot at the $200-300 price point that to spend a bit more for an FTP Alpha is totally justified.

On the other hand, comparing the FTP to a Sig Romeo 3 Max, yea there is a difference, but is the difference worth the price point you would have to pay? In my mind, no. Not like on the bottom end of the scale where spending the extra two to three hundred is almost a no brianer, I really can’t justify the very small margin of performance gained for the cost of a Sig. If you are Max Michel, or Christian Sailer, sure when you are chasing tiniest margins of performance, but for us mortals I honestly don’t see it being worth it.

Back to having six dots on six different competition guns. While the gun is different the sight is, other than the dot sizes I use, essentially the same. That is a great benefit when shooting multiple platforms. My sight window is the same on everything I shoot competitively and I don’t have to spend any mental energy trying to process something different. Couldn’t afford to do that shooting Sigs.

Failures and reliability. Yes, I have had one failure around the battery compartment contacts. There is an easy DYI fix that Fast Toys shared for older models and it works.
Shot 10k through one of my open pistols (all major loads) with the fix and still going strong.

Dislikes. I don’t like anything that tries to be smarter than me, so auto on/off anything like that doesn’t appeal, and I think adds unnecessary complexity. Also, not a huge fan of the new battery tray screw system, wish a more elegant solution could have been found.

Would like to see. A 4 moa! Think this would be sweet especially shooting with the dot occluded. Would also like to see the 6moa just a tad brighter. With the 8 moa I have never had a situation where it wasn’t bright enough, the 6 moa I have wished for it to be just a tad brighter under certain conditions.

Overall, the FTP Alpha’s just work. They hold their zero (and are easy to adjust), they don’t blow up (open guns with big compensators are not friendly to optics), they are nice to look through with a clean crisp dot. For me the choice has been easy and will likely continue to be that way.

David Low
 
To the wonderful team at FTP,


I just received my second FTP Alpha 3 (8 MOA) dot and would like to let someone know how great it is!

Other dots I have used:

SIG Romeo 3 MAX (6 MOA)
RTS2 (6 MOA) and 10 (MOA)
Holosun 407 and 507

My other FTP Alpha 3 dot is mounted on a BUL SAS II UR open gun and is such a great dot that I ordered a second one to be mounted on my custom 2011 Limited Optics that was just built. The dot is super bright on these sights so you do not have to have t he brightness turned up very high which keeps the dot sharp and you don’t have a starburst effect on the dot. But even with the dot turned all the way up on its highest setting it is much crisper, cleaner and sharper than the other dots that I have used!!! The glass itself is super clean and gives the shooter a perfect sight picture.

Another positive that I like is that the mounting configuration is a common one and doesn’t t take any kind of special order plate to be mounted on the firearm.

The battery door being a side access panel that doesn’t require the sight to be taken off is another premium feature that I enjoy about the optic and shows that FTP is really building these optics with input from shooters and with the shooters in mind when they are developing them!

Planning on having a second open gun designed and will definitely be ordering another FTOP Alpha 3 optic to be mounted on it as well!

I would highly recommend to anyone that is looking for a quality optic at a great price to not waste any time getting their hands on a FTP Alpha 3 optic!


Thank you


Richard Heater
 
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