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Peter M Voskian
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2025
Only leaving four stars for now as I'm interested how it will hold up over time. Great packaging and simple instructions. Laser is bright and responsive. Good product. Wish I had found this sooner before I bought all the in chamber ones for all my guns lol
Bling
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2025
I was really impressed with this right out of the box! I've gone through a few of these lately looking for one with a good bright laser, and this one has it! It's super bright! The o-ring construction helps to insure that you get a good and correct fit without scuffing the inside of the barrel. The aim was accurate. I liked the Dry fire featurea lot - it helps train for holding steady as you squeeze the trigger. I've heard that all of my life, and said it all of my adult life. But it was pretty cool to use this thing to be able to visually demonstrate the difference between good and bad form. It's a cool little dude! Definitely worth the price! (it was $27 as of this writing.)
JAVIER MARTINEZ
Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2025
Unfortunately for my needs I was not able to use it if you're able to use it on your rifle it might work it definitely does what it says it does as far as being a bore cider, and a laser dry fire cartridge. In that sense it works flawlessly but like I said in my case I wasn't able to put it as far down as it needs to be so it ended up moving and was not accurate when it needed to be
Seth Woolley
Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2025
Most dry fire lasers are disposable battery operated and go in the chamber. This is like a bore sighter that goes in the front of the barrel. It's similar to the Visio laser boresighter in that it is usb-c rechargable.But this has a feature I haven't seen yet. It uses mechanical accelerometers to detect a dry fire. Rather than requiring a wearing snap cap primer button and going in the chamber (though some systems allow replacements of this wear item), this just detects the motion from the firing pin or hammer vibrating the muzzle. I tried the 9mm unit on a 380 auto bodyguard 2.0 and found it reliably activated on dry fire even though it was a small pistol.As noted you need to reset the firing pin and trigger sear by racking the slide a little bit for non-double-action actions, but that's to be expected from a dry fire upon most actions that don't auto-reset the hammer or striker without recoil or exhaust gases to reload/reset.One downside of a muzzle mounted laser is the holstering will be different as the shape fore of the muzzle is now changed. So if you want to practice from a holster it would probably be best to use a chamber-based laser.To see if the laser was aligned I rotated it in the barrel and checked alignment against a far wall. I've seen some reviewers of other lasers complaint that the actual point of impact with real rounds is sometimes different. Before blaming the collimation of the laser with the barrel note that bullets will both drop as they fly and the hold of firearm in recoil can impact the orientation by the time the bullet leaves the barrel. So rotate it 90 degrees four times and check to see that it lines up on the same spot. Mine did quite well. If it's off you can pull the o-rings off and file inside the grooves until it aligns, but you will probably not need to do this. This is harder to do with a chamber-based laser. A muzzle-mounted laser also lets you very easily align it the same orientation each time you use it.So overall I'm quite happy with this design for a dry fire device. It also works well as a bore sighter for when mounting sights with a sight pusher with the constant-on mode.
JD
Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2025
Let's start with the fact that I have handfuls of "bullet" style boresights I've collected over the years along with some other multi-caliber boresights that jam into the end of the barrel. For the bullet style devices, I invariably forget to turn them off and then I have to remember which type of stupid little battery they need, and then I have to remember to order some more of the stupid little batteries, and then there is the pleasure of trying to cram said stupid little batteries into the case - and by that time, I've already gone to the range and just set zero the old fashioned way. All that to say, I totally dig that this is easily recharged on a USB-C cable and when the light on the side is green, you know you're good to go.I've got the 9mm version of this device and the fit in the barrel is nice and tight with no wiggle. There is a thin O-ring to help hold it in place and I'm not sure how long that will take to wear down, but at the start, it is rock solid.It may seem a little bulky in appearance, but the unit is extremely lightweight while feeling solidly built. I really don't notice any change in balance on my G45 or M&P, definitely nothing noticeable on the AR9.Out of the box, the boresight seems pretty true. My pistol red dot is zeroed at 25 and the boresight was right on it at that distance. At closer range, it appeared true to my irons. The dot is nice and bright but at 25 yards, I was aiming into a shadowed area for best visibility.I have no idea exactly what they use to trigger the dry fire mode, but it works well. I have a few laser targets and it set them off with no issue. It does pick up on the iTarget and Strikeman apps.We'll see how long this lasts, but on first impressions and use, I'm giving this a recommendation.Freedom from stupid little batteries!Update - just for fun on the dry-fire part, I tried this in a revolver and it works quite well. If anything, it really makes dry-fire with the revolver more fun than it is with a semi-auto because you can just rip away on DA as opposed to racking the slide with every shot one striker fire platforms.
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