The Gear I’ll Never Use Again

Silky saws....the Bahco laplander replaced them and performed better.
Wrangler ATG pants everyone raves about. I've destroyed them so fast and stitching was terrible.
Alpaca socks....a marketing scam. Don't last.
Sawyer mini is a piece of crap.
Yeti products are a scam.
Yeah, the ATG pants are don't last and cant take any type of use. I wore them out hiking on pretty flat roads and general walking.
 
Super Sabre arrow vanes. I love the concept but these are the worst vanes at sticking and consistency is horrible. I’ve given both editions a shot and never again.
 
Whats the best alternative? I liked my attack pants but dammit they are delicate.
I bought a pair of bassdash camo pants for less than half the price. They seem like they will hold up better and certainly will in terms of $/use. The only thing I wish they had was the side zip.
 
Any pant besides Kuiu attacks for 40 degrees and colder.
My first pair is still almost perfect and I believe I got em in 2017 and I have used the piss out of them. Finally got a second pair just to have clean ones on trips in gumbo country and they fit just as well.
Puffy coats with less than LOTS (5-7 oz?) of down. The Sitka WS Kelvin is incredible. Other lightweights just don't cut it.
Normal merino base layer shirts, they stay wet wayyyy too long after climbing for hours. The fishnet top is incredibly warm and dries almost instantly. Especially with the OV hoodie over it.
 
I was a little hesitant on only doing 10x and it almost bit me when I had to concentrate super hard to select and confirm a muley in brush at sunset.
More magnification only makes this worse due to the exit pupil getting smaller and thus darker. If you want “more light” scale up your physical scope size (eg, 50 or 56mm) so it gathers more light, and try to upgrade the quality of the scope itself for the clarity and coatings.
 
- Suppressors for hunting. They're expensive, add considerable weight, and I just really don't need it for hunting.
- Bipods for hunting. Same exact reasons, more money, more weight, and don't really need it for most hunting situations.
- Non-fluid glassing heads. Most non-fluid glassing heads just end up making me frustrated on glassing intense hunts. A fluid head just makes the experience so much better.
 
More magnification only makes this worse due to the exit pupil getting smaller and thus darker. If you want “more light” scale up your physical scope size (eg, 50 or 56mm) so it gathers more light, and try to upgrade the quality of the scope itself for the clarity and coatings.

It is the 50mm objective VX-3HD. Plenty large enough for light. The glass quality and lack of parallax adjustment were the limiting factors. I just could not make out the fine detail. Went to the range yesterday with this and the new Credo HX 2.5-15x. The Credo was significantly better at 10x.
 
Back
Top