Jager627
Member
- Location
- Northern Ontario
Anybody recieved theirs yet? First thoughts/impressions?
I'm thinking of putting one on my vz58
I put in an order on Monday and its still Processing... So I can't help you there
Anybody recieved theirs yet? First thoughts/impressions?
I'm thinking of putting one on my vz58
I think if you pull apart most "Made in USA" or "Made in Canada" articles, you will quickly realize that even the most patriotic of vendors(read Harley Davidson, etc) are merely assembled in the declared country from mostly offshore parts. For the skeptics, google "value added method for determining country of origin." I will abridge it because it's very, very dry. A product is valued by a predetermined percentage of value. For this example lets say we decide that 51% value added determines where the product was made. We have $12 in chicom parts, assembled in a union shop in Milwaukee and it takes 1.5 hours to assemble at a shop rate of $45/hour. That product can be made of 100% chicom materials and still be declared "Made in the USA" because it took $60 in labour to assemble, placing the production value at $72, of which only $12 or roughly 12.6% of the value added was off shore. Similarily, you can take a fully assembled chicom product bought in bulk a $5/unit, put it in a $3 package, and charge $3 in labour to handle and package it and you have a 100% chicom product, packaged and labeled as "Made in the USA" Keeping this in mind, don't be shocked if you discover that some of your favourite north american made products have nothing american in them at all.
OK, being a complete noob on the subject of lasers, for the Green Laser & 4 Color NAV LED, can anybody chime in and enlighten me/us on what exactly the 4-colour NAV lights are for, and how that works, in 3000 words or less? ;-D
And also on the ECO scope, it only has 2-colour NAV lights, are those for the same purpose?
NcStar products are really interesting..
Can anyone confirm they really can hold zero on a .308 ?
Like navigation in the dark lights, different colours to help your eyes in the dark, not as bright as white light, 4 choices
If your standing on the starboard side of the PT-boat you should be using the green light and red is for port side....![]()
Yes, the NCS-DDAB can be mounted on top of the ECO scope and the LAM unit
![]()
found here: https://www.marstar.ca/dynamic/product.jsp?productid=75779
Guys I just received this and the echo model thank you. The red dot however is NOT the correct unit for the echo as it has a permanent picatinny attachment on it and cannot be mounted direct to the slot for the red dot as you cannot remove the rail section. I know NC star has a unit without the rail attachment that mounts direct to the slot for the red dot, but I thought this had both based on your comments that it fit
take the reflex sight off of its picatinny clamp mount...
Guys I just received this and the echo model thank you. The red dot however is NOT the correct unit for the echo as it has a permanent picatinny attachment on it and cannot be mounted direct to the slot for the red dot as you cannot remove the rail section. I know NC star has a unit without the rail attachment that mounts direct to the slot for the red dot, but I thought this had both based on your comments that it fit
I think if you pull apart most "Made in USA" or "Made in Canada" articles, you will quickly realize that even the most patriotic of vendors(read Harley Davidson, etc) are merely assembled in the declared country from mostly offshore parts. For the skeptics, google "value added method for determining country of origin." I will abridge it because it's very, very dry. A product is valued by a predetermined percentage of value. For this example lets say we decide that 51% value added determines where the product was made. We have $12 in chicom parts, assembled in a union shop in Milwaukee and it takes 1.5 hours to assemble at a shop rate of $45/hour. That product can be made of 100% chicom materials and still be declared "Made in the USA" because it took $60 in labour to assemble, placing the production value at $72, of which only $12 or roughly 12.6% of the value added was off shore. Similarily, you can take a fully assembled chicom product bought in bulk a $5/unit, put it in a $3 package, and charge $3 in labour to handle and package it and you have a 100% chicom product, packaged and labeled as "Made in the USA" Keeping this in mind, don't be shocked if you discover that some of your favourite north american made products have nothing american in them at all.
You must be a blast at parties!