Congrats on #5.
I make it faster to get off a shot. I usually per mount the gun on a tripod aimed at the baited location with a pellet chambered safety on. If using IR night vision if you setup a always on webcam the light doesn't move or change intensity the critters don't get spooked. The webcam can send your phone an alert then all you have to do is look down the scope turn the safety off make minor corrections to your aim and squeeze the shot off.
Without IR night vision or thermal scopes you can you a regular scope with a projected red light beam that is adjustable in brightness. I made one that is 12 watts and has a 6 degree spread and is controlled by wifi to ramp slowly to the desired brightness. I mount the light to a tripod offset and away from the shooters position so that it doesn't attract attention to shooter. The critters don't seem to get to bothered with a red light that is far away 30+ yards and doesn't move and ramps slowly over 15 to 30 seconds to full brightness.
I make it faster to get off a shot. I usually per mount the gun on a tripod aimed at the baited location with a pellet chambered safety on. If using IR night vision if you setup a always on webcam the light doesn't move or change intensity the critters don't get spooked. The webcam can send your phone an alert then all you have to do is look down the scope turn the safety off make minor corrections to your aim and squeeze the shot off.
Without IR night vision or thermal scopes you can you a regular scope with a projected red light beam that is adjustable in brightness. I made one that is 12 watts and has a 6 degree spread and is controlled by wifi to ramp slowly to the desired brightness. I mount the light to a tripod offset and away from the shooters position so that it doesn't attract attention to shooter. The critters don't seem to get to bothered with a red light that is far away 30+ yards and doesn't move and ramps slowly over 15 to 30 seconds to full brightness.
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