Fibre Optic Sight Colours

7.62mm

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So, what is the preference for Fibre Optic Front sights colour, for indoor and outdoor, and your reasons one way or the other please. Does a persons eye naturally pick up a certain colour in certain lighting conditions? Or is it just personal preference? Do you change the Fibre optic rod, when moving to indoor from outdoor, cloudy conditions outside. ...?

All opinions welcome,
Thanks
 
THEY say that green gets picked up faster by the eye. I use whatever is lying around for fibre but if have to buy replacement I'll go red or green. Doesn't seem to matter to me.
 
THEY say that green gets picked up faster by the eye. I use whatever is lying around for fibre but if have to buy replacement I'll go red or green. Doesn't seem to matter to me.

Warm colors (red) advance or draw the eye, whereas cool colors (green) recede, so pick-up time is faster for warm colors. You can test this by letting your eyes unfocus (infinity) and just glance around the room. Notice which colours you see first? It's always going to be the warmest colours that pull the eye.

Problem is the red fibers are not pure red; they tend more towards orange. Adding yellow to red to make orange tends to make it halo slightly or blur the edges somewhat visually. What happens is that for many people they can pick up the red fiber quicker, but can't DEFINE it as quickly when they have to suddenly ratchet down and shoot an accurate shot (on a tight partial for example) so they get better overall results with the green because it doesn't halo as much. Depends a lot on your eyes too, but I found the green didn't really work for me. It was a lot slower to pick up.....for me.

Interestingly, I got pretty reasonable results by just removing the fiber all together and letting natural ambient light shine define the hole in the sight. Great out doors; not so great indoors, but that is the problem with compromise. Some of the green rods actually look more clear than green, so if green is your preference the more desaturated rods would probably work best.

Alternately, if you can ensure that the red/orange fiber is buried flush or slightly below the surface of the front sight so that its edges are surrounded by metal (rather than being pumpkined out over top of it to pick up extra light), the fiber will have better edge definition. This will probably give you the best of both worlds.

Sorry for the excessive nerdiness.
 
This might depend on your eyes. I'm color deficient (low response to green) but have a high response to yellow and red.

The average person has yellowish-green as the highest response color (see link below) but it might not be the best color for a sight for a wide range of applications as it might blend in the background more. Please also notice that the response changes with the level of ambient light. In my case, I can distinguish red better than other colors so this might the reason for the popularity of red dot scopes?

As a rule, the human eye has a non-linear wavelength (color) response and because of this, you will see road signs using colors to addess this (see link down below).

And for those that don't see a red dot or fiber optic sight as clearly as they wish (including me), this might be related to astigmatism or cataracts.

This can be corrected somewhat by using an adjustable iris for your sighting eye. It might not be convenient for hunting but would be applicable for sighting your guns or competitive target shooting.

Duke1

http://www.ndt-ed.org/EducationResources/CommunityCollege/PenetrantTest/Introduction/lightresponse.htm
 
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Excessive nerdiness is alright. Actually, I was kinda hoping Tritium was going to pop in here. I remember when doing the BB Course, he mumbled something about different colours for different conditions blah, blah, blah.:D

Anyways, thanks for the responses so far:D
 
Brazos fibres are deep in color compared to others on the market Ihave found also.

Relliot, can you pass along any resources to this info?
 
Brazos fibres are deep in color compared to others on the market Ihave found also.

Relliot, can you pass along any resources to this info?

This might help.

h ttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_theory

I used to do a lot of painting (Art...not houses) and I observed this blending of edges there first. I probably read about it in one of the color theory manuals I read back then as well, but when I started experimenting with sights it was obvious what was happening. Tonally, a pure red reads as almost black, so it has a similar contrast. Yellow however reads as a light Grey, so there is very little contrast. As well, red pigments also tend to have greater opacity, while yellow isn't very good at stopping light at all and tends to spread it rather than reflect it back. I'm not sure that matters in a fiber optic, but for sure SOMETHING is spreading the light.

Before fiber optics became common place, I found the best thing for me was straight fluorescent red paint on the front sight. I think I would still prefer that, but I can't seem to find the color anymore that I used back then. Everything I've tried lately has too much yellow in it.

Hope this helps
 
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