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Torrey Pines Logic T10TM-N Thermal Imaging Sight. Hogs and varmints can run... but they can't hide! SAVE!
Find your target in complete darkness, bad weather, smoke and more! If it radiates heat, you can see it! No matter if it's the dead of a moonless night, in the middle of a storm, on a smoke-filled battlefield or in dense cover, the advanced, heat-detecting capability of this Torry Pines Logic T10™-N Thermal Imaging Sight sees what night vision scopes can't.
The features of this remarkably compact Sight rival that of models costing much more: wide-angle field of view, multiple display views, temperature read-out and a variety of mounting options, including a standard Picatinny mount and handle that allows for use as a handheld device. Excellent for hog hunting and other nighttime or foul weather hunts, plus useful for security, search and rescue, energy efficiency / maintenance and electrical applications.
Keep your eyes on the prize:
- On-board image processing enhancement modes
- Manual and automatic NUC capability
- Temperature read-out
- Battery read-out and protection
- Auto power-save helps conserve battery when not in use
- Multiple display views: white hot, color, black hot, NV green
- Field of view: 25°
- Effective range: 120m
- Resolution: 80 x 60 pixels with FLIR Leptons
- Frame rate: 9Hz
- Shutter: No
- Measures 2.65" x 1.79" x 1.77", weighs 109 grams (without battery)
- Uses CR123 3V battery for approx. 8 hours of operation (not included)
- Includes wrist strap and handle with Picatinny rail
Put the power of all-seeing thermal imagery to work for you!
SKU#: WX2-652520
UPC#: 609408544996

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SK1295
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Compare prices for 609408544996 - Torrey Pines Logic T12-N Mini Thermal Imager,25 Degree FOV,9hz,Black T-12N TPT12N02 from all vendors

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$19.99
$561.58
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Comments (22)

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Yeah, 80x60 is too low a resolution [Remember cell phones with only 256k pixel photos? This is 100th of that...] 9hz is too slow an update speed: when's the last time you played a FPS computer game at a refresh speed of 9 frames per second & didn't get fragged?

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If I saw ANY soldier using one of these, I would be shocked. Maybe some insurgent in the Middle East, but I'm sure even they have FLIR for iPhone...

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Seems like something to show off to your buddies at your barbecue. I seriously question its usefulness as either a CQB or long-range site.

I'd rather have a decent NV optic, and an IR laser with momentary controls.

The new FLIR for Android seems far better than this unit. Hell, an Atari 2400 seems better.

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I owned this for a couple of months before I finally returned it. The screen is the size of a SMALL postage stamp. Not the oblong postage stamp, the small square. The refresh rate is horrible and anything that moves is a blur until it catches up including me looking around with it. I got it to try and hog hunt and it's useless. I figured I would keep it to find my dogs in the dark when I let them out at night, but didn't do well for that either. The quality just isn't there with this one. Wait until version 3.0 arrives.

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There was a guy selling these at gun show and he seemed knowledgable. He also owns an optic shop in TX. He was saying 75 yards max for accurate use. So mainly CQ stuff...

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I don't think 80x60 pixels is enough resolution for any real effective mid range++ shooting.

(Quick math - At the very best, at 100 yards, with a sight window of around 25 degrees, you are looking at nearly 60 feet of coverage being approximated by only 80 pixels.
100yd * 25deg * pi / 180 = 60 ft Field of View
60ft/80pixels = 0.75ft per pixel
So at the very very best, your center reticle pixel is 8" wide at 100yards.)

I think I mathed that right...

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so maybe suited best for a close quarters 25yds and less rabbit optic for at night or other critters? or is it more for a combat room clearing standpoint?

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can these be used with a magnifier? what is the range on this? can it pick up a human body at lets say 100yds in pitch black on body heat alone? very little info and reviews on these it seems

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Same product is advertised @ SG for $480.
https://gun.deals/product/torrey-pines-logic-t10-n-thermal-imaging-sight-48599-after-coupon-sg3719-members-only...

Please remove / expire the outdated ad.

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80 x 60 pixels @9Hz for $539.99?
It's way over priced, and it's basically useless.
Thermal sensor is getting less expensive today. The $200 seek thermal attachment has a 206x155 pixels thermal sensor.

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This is Junk - don't waste your money!!!!!

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9 Hz refresh rate....that is abismal.

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I cant imagine paying $600 for a toy sight. I feel bad for the people that got duped into buying one. Anything under 30Hz is pretty much useless on anything that moves.

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Excuse my ignorance, but what does the Hz rating mean in this context?

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The Hz is the refresh rate of the imaging core.

Think of it like a TV, the average budget television runs at 60 hz or frames per second. That means the television is refreshing the image on the entire screen 60 times per second, which creates a smooth and fluid picture when things move across the screen. The higher your refresh rate, or Hz, the smoother and more natural a moving object on the screen will appear.

The human eye can easily detect stutter in movements on a screen at anything below 60 Hz. (Movie projectors are different due to the nature that the image is brightly projected on a large screen in a dark room.)

The difference between Hz ratings on a thermal device and a television screen is that the Hz rating on a thermal device is the maximum refresh rate that the camera is able to produce. The screen on the thermal device could very well be able to produce a much faster refresh rate, but it is limited by the capabilities of what the thermal sensor in the "core" of the device is able to feed to the screen that you are looking at in the scope.

30Hz is the absolute minimum that you should be looking for in a thermal scope that is useful for helping you navigate at night, or hunt with. Anything under that, and you are severely limited by lots of motion blur and stutter, which will basically make the screen look like a white image with black blobs moving across it.

Keep in mind, the higher you go up in Hz or refresh rates in a device, the more power it will consume. If you buy a thermal scope with a 60Hz refresh rate, the image will be smooth enough to allow you to drive on roads at night, using only the scope to see through the dark. It also means that you will eat through batteries a lot faster than a scope with a 30Hz refresh rate.

If you are dead set on getting a nice thermal scope after reading this wall of text, you're better off waiting for the new short wave thermal scopes to hit the market. The definition is amazing in shortwave thermal technology. Looking through a SWIR scope is literally like looking through grey tinted sunglasses in broad daylight. Except you can see through rain and fog, and heat sources glow.

Hope this helps.

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Wow, detailed answer! :)
Thanks for the info!

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Read up on these before you buy them where you will know what you are getting. This model is good for about 125 meters. I am hoping by next May they will have some thing more with the features I want. The other two models 30 meters.

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Looks so badass....wish thermal stuff wasn't so expensive.

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So basically you just mount this on a rail and use it like a red dot sight?

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According to Torrey Pines rep. it goes in front of your red dot or other optics , so it is co-witnessed.

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