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It's Easy Seein' Green. Night-vision scopes make your closet the color of Baghdad.
Slate ^ | Mar 27, 2003 | Paul Boutin

Posted on 03/28/2003 2:56:12 PM PST by John Jorsett

Of all the military gadgets on parade on television, there's one you can bring home without spooking the neighbors into thinking you've gone postal. Night-vision scopes, once available only at defense contractor prices, can be found nowadays at Wal-Mart for less than $100. The new consumer models are less powerful than the military versions, but they're more portable, too. They're also more stylish, so you won't look like that creep from Silence of the Lambs.

Technology has made huge leaps since the first Gulf War, but the grunts in the field still wear the same AN/PVS-7 headsets manufactured for Desert Storm by Northrop Grumman. U.S. civilians can buy the PVS-7 for themselves, but prices start at around $2,500 and can run to more than four grand for the model used in the gulf. A much more attractive option—literally—is the Night Owl Aero, a sleek, lightweight, sub-$200 unit designed to be held in one hand rather than strapped to your head cyborg-style.

The Aero is built around first-generation night-vision technology, which puts it two steps behind the third-generation PVS-7. But for amateur reconnaissance runs, it does just fine. First-time users inevitably gasp when they take the Aero into a darkened closet and press its illuminator button, which causes a small red bulb on the front of the unit to glow dimmer than a lighted cigarette. Looking into the eyepiece the first time is an oh-my-God moment. The illuminator emits infrared light (invisible to humans), and the Aero's circuits crank it up to a brilliant green, making the room bright enough to read the New York Times without squinting. Look away from the lens, and the room is pitch black. Brain to eyeballs: Does not compute.

Night vision works by converting photons to electrons. Incoming light particles (the photons) strike a plate that emits an electrical pattern in response. In the case of the Aero, the resulting signal is amplified 15,000 times and shown on a small video screen. But why is Baghdad by night—or your closet with the door closed—green? The human eye (or rather, the brain behind it) is better at differentiating subtle shades of green more than any other color, possibly a result of evolution among lush vegetation. Shifting the frequency of a night scope's monochromatic image from grays to greens makes it easier to discern shapes, shadows, and movement.

Night vision really stands out in the wild, where it illuminates a hopping animal nightlife far busier than a few chirping crickets. Some zoos give night-vision tours to watch the alligators feed in the dark, but even the local woods turn out to be full of bugs, bunnies, and deer who conduct nocturnal raids on the flower garden. The Aero is fronted by a 2.5x magnification lens to overcome distance as well as darkness.

In urban tests, the Aero let me read the license plates of cars parked overnight on my block and watch local winos fumble with the contents of their brown paper bags at 4 a.m. Its super-sensitive vision could sometimes see through a slinky dress to reveal the outlines of underwear. But the more shocking discovery was that I wasn't alone in the dark. Through the Aero's eyepiece, normally invisible light sources shone as brightly as regular bulb. Motion detectors gleamed from doorways. Some downtown buildings sported infrared security cameras (why they don't just use a 1,000-watt floodlight, I don't know). Most surprising of all, other night-vision users were out and about. The insides of their scopes shone back at me like glowing green eyes whenever our gazes crossed paths. At an all-night outdoor rave, I spotted the local cops looking through second-generation police goggles from the darkened cab of their truck. Crime-spotting, or just girl watching?


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aero; miltech; nightvision; northropgrumman

1 posted on 03/28/2003 2:56:12 PM PST by John Jorsett
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To: John Jorsett
Forget the lady stuff. I wanted (and got) a pair of night vision goggles for Christmas last year. Next an M-16.
2 posted on 03/28/2003 3:18:44 PM PST by holyscroller (Why are Liberal female media types always ugly to boot?)
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To: holyscroller
Let me know if you need to adopt a 42 year old.

LOL

Regards,

L

3 posted on 03/28/2003 3:22:42 PM PST by Lurker ("One man of reason and goodwill is worth more, actually and potentially, than a million fools" AR)
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To: John Jorsett
Of all the military gadgets on parade on television, there's one you can bring home without spooking the neighbors into thinking you've gone postal

What good is it if you don't freak out the neighbors?

BTW: I'm looking at WWII vehicle or some sort of Armor car for my next purchase.

4 posted on 03/28/2003 3:38:50 PM PST by husky ed (FOX NEWS ALERT "Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead" THIS HAS BEEN A FOX NEWS ALERT)
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To: husky ed
During WW2, the Germans and the Americans had IR based night vision technology. Americans had a hand-held unit known as the "Snooper Scope" and a rifle-mounted unit known as the "Sniper Scope" which appeared around 1943. They were used in limited numbers in the Pacific. Japanese intelligence attributed the superior night vision of American gunners and sentries to drugs.

I own an original snooper scope, miniature vacuum tube technology was a marvel of technology in its day, its just a quaint museum piece now. But it does show how far back the roots of modern technology go.

5 posted on 03/28/2003 3:48:36 PM PST by rageaholic
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To: rageaholic
I own an original snooper scope,

If you had that here in California, you'd be breaking the law. Any scope that emits infrared and can be mounted on a firearm (presumably with duct tape if need be) is verboten. God I loathe the dweebs who run this state.

6 posted on 03/28/2003 3:58:38 PM PST by John Jorsett
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To: holyscroller
I think Xmas is gonna come early for me this year :) Whoo-hoo!
7 posted on 03/28/2003 4:00:29 PM PST by bonfire
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To: John Jorsett
eh, it's busted and doesn't emit anything except a slightly musty smell.
8 posted on 03/28/2003 4:06:52 PM PST by rageaholic
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To: holyscroller
Your going to have to move. Under Washington Rev Code Title 9 Chapter 9.41 Section 9.41.190 it is illegal to own one unless it was owned prior to July 1, 1994.
9 posted on 03/28/2003 4:15:39 PM PST by Kadric
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To: John Jorsett
Back in the early days of computers, the premium monitors were green. I sometimes miss that when reading lots of text. It was a lot easier on the eye.
10 posted on 03/28/2003 4:18:29 PM PST by js1138
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To: John Jorsett
Look away from the lens, and the room is pitch black. Brain to eyeballs: Does not compute.

This is what is sooo cool. When you are out and about w/ one of these, you can be looking at someone 200 or more yards away in the dark and see them clearly. At the same time they are looking at you KNOWING there is no way that you could see them....WRONG!

11 posted on 03/28/2003 4:25:15 PM PST by alexandria ((Shpeling Opshunal))
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To: holyscroller
Forget the lady stuff. I wanted (and got) a pair of night vision goggles for Christmas last year. Next an M-16.

Got mine for Christmas, too.
Love 'em.
M-16 is much later. Need a sidearm more.

12 posted on 03/28/2003 6:51:46 PM PST by sistergoldenhair (Don't be a sheep. People hate sheep. They eat sheep.)
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