- Joined
- Jan 5, 2012
- Messages
- 9,511
It was a question.Can you provide links, for both?
Another scope manufacturer was throwing scopes off of the roof of their HQ or adjacent building. But that petered out for reasons that I am not privy to.
That stated, throwing a scope on the ground doesn't tell us much. Unless it's an obvious fail.
When I was doing product dev, we didn't have a drop requirement, but did it anyway with production representative models. This was considered severe abuse, but we used it for advertising. And customers expected it, but it was simply due to over-engineered products setting an unrealistic expectation in the past.
I left that industry, but now have clients that do drop tests for Hi-Rel and MIL-STD. I make sure that they don't make unfounded claims. You'd be surprised how many don't understand the complexity of a drop test.
I haven't seen either company publicly drop a scope. But take Trijicon, for instance. "Drop Tested" is in their marketing... an educated guess would be that they have dropped a few.
It's like baking a cake. You pick the ingredient. Some optics companies prioritize durability as their first ingredient, while others don't.
