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Now Serving 7.62 |
Based on Paras recommendation long ago I bought a TruNord pocket model and after awhile bought the zipper pull type model for a buddy. I grew up using compasses as a boy and in the Army I used two different compasses both as a rifleman and a mortar gunner. I still use a compass and map and will be teaching my daughters Girl Scout to use compass and map. I digress. I’ve had a bit of a bug with pocket compasses, collecting and carrying different ones and using them hiking, backpacking, orienting for radio antennas, etc. I’ve used the Suunto, the Peyser NATO, many Marbles old and new, MecArmy, etc. I’ve been most impressed with TruNord for a few reasons, one being they are well machined and the cards hash of degrees in many increments making it easier to follow a degree grading or damn closer to it than other pocket compasses I’ve used. It’s a gasket sealed solid unit without binding. I bought one of the new Cammenga WC 10 wrist compasses that I had high hopes for but had to send it in because the card would stick a little here and there and I couldn’t be confident it was actually North, and it was not half as many times. Sent it to the company and after a couple of months I received a new (but it didn’t look quite new). This Cammenga does the same thing! It has so much potential but something isn’t right in my mind. Back to the TruNord, theives broke into my FJ Cruiser and after smashing half my damn windows stole my go bag. $11,000 all said and done. The bastards took my Sphinx, Strider, RMJ Tactical Hawk, SteinerS, and on and on to include my Peyser and TruNord. Once insurance took care of me I replace the TruNord with the titanium model. Weighs about as much as a plastic pants button. I noticed when I got it there was a little scratch or similar on the lens only slightly annoying. Decided to send it in and ask them to reset mine to magnetic north and let me adjust. When they made that adjustment on this Ti model they did what I asked AND looks like they replaced the lens with the scratch or whatever. I never even mentioned it, they just took care of me. Para covered a lot in his review. There are only maybe 2-3 pocket compasses I’d trust and TruNord to work, take abuse, and get me home. Yes, the titanium model was ALOT but I’m happy with it. I forgot to mention, there is no tritium in the TruNord but the glow they use is phenomenally bright.This message has been edited. Last edited by: 10X-Shooter, | |||
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Staring back from the abyss |
I've had a military issue one for many years. Somehow or another it came home with me when I ETS'd. Can't explain how that happened. Best compass available IMO. ________________________________________________________ "Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton. | |||
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member |
I like my Plastimo Iris 50 hand bearing compass for that. Single degree reading. | |||
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Member |
Dangit, I didn't need to see that. I'm a sucker for good equipment. Now I'm having to fight off the urge to buy about $700 in interesting compasses. I haven't even touched a compass in probably a decade! | |||
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Freethinker |
At the other end of the scale: http://www.rosslondon.com/Comp...rM73M88.htm#M73BLACK Unfortunately they advise that tritium markers are currently unavailable. Yes, I actually know someone very well who bought the black M73 and is very pleased with it. ► 6.4/93.6 “Most men … can seldom accept the simplest and most obvious truth if it … would oblige them to admit the falsity of conclusions … which they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabrics of their lives.” — Leo Tolstoy | |||
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Now Serving 7.62 |
The tritium in those saved our bacon many times in Panama JOTC. When someone fell behind in a column under triple canopy jungle pitch dark it was a silent way to reconnect. | |||
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