I mistakenly zeroed using the top of the reticle thinking the two lower ones were for holdovers. Below is the sight picture looking through the Mepro Foresight. I thought the R-21 or R-18 might help as a ballistic drop compensator but they do not work like that. I found many of these reticles to not be that helpful for my IWI X95. Below are the various reticles you can choose from. Once selected and the Foresight is updated, you just press the left or right buttons to change reticles. However, you can only pick 5 out of the 21. The Meprolight app has 21 different reticles. Once saved, you can then swap the optic to each gun, load the profile and the zero will be set. Each profile needs to have the Mepro Foresight zeroed to the guns you assign each profile to. You can have up to 10 profiles in the app. The profile silhouette is not specially created to match those weapons. There are nine different gun profile silhouettes. Once synced, you can name the optic and create a gun profile. Then exit the menu and try syncing to the app again. If BLE is set to OFF, scroll down and press the main mode switch to turn it on. Press the main mode button on the sight and bring up this simple menu. Often the Foresight will be on but it won’t connect to the app. If you do not turn on your sight, it will stay like this photo below and eventually say it could not connect. Once you bring up the Meprolight App, it wants to connect to the Foresight. And it can pair via Bluetooth to a smartphone. I would prefer the buttons to be raised more and have more texture so it is easier to find the right button by touch rather than sight.Īs I mentioned earlier, the Mepro Foresight is an augmented red dot sight. ![]() I found myself hunting for the proper button if I do not look directly at them. Another minor issue is the lack of texture on these buttons. I found these buttons to be too low profile. On top of the Mepro Foresight is a directional pad and centralized mode selector button. This tells the Mepro Foresight to increase the brightness or dim it based on ambient lighting. Tighten or loosen these to adjust the tension of the mount.Īt the front of the Mepro Foresight is a light sensor just above the battery compartment. On the other side of the Foresight, there are nylon locking nuts. The levers have a strange hook-like shape and they look rather cheap. The design of the mounting levers leaves some to be desired. The Mepro Foresight has two integrated throw levers to mount it to a Picatinny rail. You need to plug in the Mepro Foresight into a USB-C cable and then plug that into a USB power supply to charge it up. However, the Mepro Foresight is powered by an internal rechargeable battery. The form factor is somewhat like an EOTECH 512. But before we delve into the reticles, let’s pull back and look at the physical sight itself. The reticle and projected information are more of an amber color. While the Mepro Foresight is listed as a “red dot” it is not red. ![]() The Mepro Foresight looks and functions very similar to an EOTECH HWS. Meprolight is an Israeli company so I figured the best weapon to mount it onto would be my IWI X95. Meprolight’s Heads-Up Display Red Dot – the Foresight.An Augmented Reality Sight? The Self-Zeroing Foresight Smart Optic from Meprolight.Meprolight Releases MEPRO O2 Multi-Pattern Red Dot.It can also be paired with a smartphone for more features. The Mepro Foresight is an advanced augmented red dot sight that has a wide variety of reticles and options. Today we take a look at an interesting optic that has a lot of potential and features you do not normally see in a reflex sight. There are a lot of optical sight options for your firearm.
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