Lucid Optics at SHOT Show 2023

SHOT Show is a great opportunity to meet the people at a brand face to face. But it’s not often that you get to meet a company’s CEO and have him personally walk you through their new products. At SHOT Show 2023 at the Lucid Optics booth, I did just that. Lucid’s CEO, Jason Wilson, showed me their newest Prism scope, red dot, monocular, and spotting scope.

Their products appear to be well made and have impressive specs (and impressive premium prices). I hope to test their products later this year to see if they live up to it.

Don’t get Goggles4U wet

Last year, I ordered prescription bifocal tinted sunglasses from the online optical company Goggles4u.com. I really liked their product selection and especially their low price. They even had an augmented reality tool on their website that allowed me to virtually wear a selection of their frames and see what they looked like using my computer camera.

I bought these sunglasses for daytime driving and they worked as until I got them dirty. I dripped some food on them when I got food in a drive through. So to give them a proper cleaning, I followed the advice I’d been given by every optometrist I’ve ever been to: wet the lenses thoroughly with water and clean them gently with lens cleaning fluid or a drop of dish detergent. After doing this, I discovered to my alarm that the coating on the tinted lenses washed off! The view through the glasses were now blurry and blemished.

I went to Goggles4u.com and used their Customer Service form page to upload photos of the glasses and ask them if something was wrong with how my glasses were constructed. The following emails were dumbfounding. Their Customer Service representatives explained to me that their sunglass coatings are NOT water proof! WTF?! Not only have I never heard of this kind of defect in custom optical eyewear but there was no warning of this issue when I ordered the glasses (nor now on the website.)

So while I had held this company in high esteem, this experience has flipped my opinion of this company and their products. I will never, ever buy or recommend their glasses.



New Third Bay Ounce CCW Pistol

At an undecorated, non-descript booth in the lower level of the Venetian Expo Hall, my crew called my attention to what is possibly the most interesting new pistol at SHOT show. At the Third Bay booth, they were displaying the OUNCE, the most compact and lightest 10+1rnd semi-auto pistol I’d ever seen. I got a chance to talk with its inventor and company owner, Bill Osborne.

The story of the OUNCE’s invention is tragic. After the inventors relative was raped at home was inspired to create this pistol. Bill set about using his experience as a mechanical engineer to create a solution to the common issues with CCW pistols: reliability, safety, weight, and printing (showing the shape of a gun on your clothing). Bill designed a pistol that could fold into a wallet sized profile that could easily be carried and deployed without the need of a specialized carry holster.

In its folded state, the OUNCE is 4.75″ x 3.85″ and about an inch thick, which is about the size of a Beretta Bobcat. But unlike that classic pocket gun, the OUNCE is a 1/4lb lighter, holds 3 more rounds, and has a normal length grip. In addition, in its folded state the OUNCE presents a silhouette that looks nothing like a gun.

A folding self-defense pistol isn’t new. The LIFECARD 22LR folding pistol is about the same size as the OUNCE but the LIFECARD is a single-shot .22LR weapon that requires a manual reload. Unless you’re 100% sure of your aim, using a one-shot gun is problematic. The OUNCE carries 10+1 rounds of 22LR is a quantum leap in terms of firepower and assurance when used for self-defense.

Like many, I was a bit dubious of this pistol’s reliability due to the OUNCE’s unconventional design. It’s mostly polymer body seemed almost toy-like. The action and internal magazine are unique with an almost vertical loading of the cartridges.

Because it is chambered for .22LR, I asked about the manual of arms for emergency clearing of a dud round. Folding and unfolding the handle manually clears any cartridge in the chamber and loads the next round in the magazine. With a bit of practice, this can accomplished in about the same time as racking and clearing a slide; which isn’t all that easy either given the size of conventional micro-compact pistols. As with all CCW firearms, practice and familiarity and vital for reliable use.

Legal restrictions on CCW sized pistols varies widely by municipality, so be sure to check all of your local laws before ordering. The pistol is not cheap at around $900. It’s not a Glock being churned out by the thousands in a factory. All the guns are made by the inventor in his workshop and so are essentially, a made-to-order custom gun. Currently this pistol is available directly from Third Bay https://ounceoz.com/

New at the Pardini booth 2023

Pardini is famous for making some of the most unique Olympic competition pistols and rifles. These pistols start at around $3000 and go up from there and their rifles start at over $10,000. In the atmospheric world of Olympic firearms these prices are unremarkable. But unlike other Olympic guns, Pardini ooze a signature high-design aesthetic of late 1980’s futurism.

New for this year, Pardini is offering extended magazines for Precision Bullseye and competitors. And a brand new laser gun. Seriously. A laser gun for Modern Pentathlon. https://www.pardiniguns.com/