ITL MARS
The ITL MARS (Multi-purpose Aiming Reflex Sight) is a gun sight that combines two sighting devices, a reflex sight and a laser sight, as well as a backup iron sight. It is designed and produced by ITL Optronics company, based in Israel. The laser may be either visible or infrared and can be activated as need via a pressure switch. It has been purchased by a number of forces including the U.S. military for its M16 series weapons, Israel for its IMI Tavor TAR-21 rifle, and India (locally manufactured under license as raptor sight) for its INSAS rifle, as well as other commercial customers.
Optics & Sensors:
Magnification: | 1x |
Sight exit aperture: | 25mm |
Reflex dot diameter: | 0.3mRad (about 1" @ 100m) |
Parallax: | <0.2mRad at infinity |
Light transmission: | 85% for photopic response |
Red dot compensation: | Automatic, dynamic range = 1 |
Dot intensity control: | OFF, HIGH, MEDIUM, LOW, VERY LOW 5 positions (NVGs) |
Optical distortion: | 0.5o angular deviation of parallel light beams through the sight |
Laser Pointers | ||
---|---|---|
Red: | 650nm, 1.0 mW, Class 2 (IEC 825-1) | |
IR (optional): | 850nm, 0.4 mW, Class 1 (IEC 825-1)**restricted to law enforcement and military only | |
Beam divergence: | 0.5mRad | |
Zeroing | ||
Adjustment: | Reflex sight and pointing lasers adjusted with one operation | |
Physical | ||
Weight: | 15.2oz. with battery and cable | |
Dimensions: | 4.9in (L), 1.7in (W), 3.4in (H) | |
Adapter: | Picatinny rail | |
Electrical | ||
Power Source: | Single 1.5V "AA" battery | |
Reflex Sight operation: | 200hr continuous | |
Laser pointer: | 10,000 operations of 5 sec each | |
Low voltage warning: | @ 1V ±0.1V, non-interfering with sight operation | |
Reliability | ||
Laser switch lifetime: | Min 40,000 operations | |
Environmental | ||
Temperature Range: | -20° C to +55° C MIL STD 810F | |
Humidity: | 95% at +70° C | |
Thermal shock: | -20° C to +70° C | |
Immersion: | 1m, 30min. Salt fog, dust and sand | |
Altitude: | 15,000ft-50,000ft (non-operating) | |
Shock: | 30g for 11ms |
See also
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to ITL MARS. |
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