One centimeter off.
300 meters later:
one life too many.

Small deviations in optical systems are invisible to the eye. But their consequences in operations can be devastating. Most scopes are trusted. Few are tested.

The Blind Spot in Modern Procurement

When "Good Enough" Isn't

Rifles are tested. Ammunition is certified.
Optics? Often delivered based on a spec sheet.

Even in high-stakes scenarios, optical performance is rarely verified post-assembly.

If the reticle shifts, the eye won’t know — until the round has left the barrel

Real Risks of Unverified Scopes

When Precision Becomes Liability

Off-target hits in urban combat or hostage operations

Collateral damage due to minor deviation

Mistrust between weapon and user

Legal ambiguity: Was it user error, or optical error?

Tactical escalation due to avoidable misfire

Potential contract breaches if scopes don't meet claimed specs

What's Usually Tested — and What's Not

The Testing Gap

Many manufacturers rely on a few highly trained individuals with excellent eyesight — a resource that is hard to scale and prone to fatigue over time. As production grows, repeatability becomes harder to ensure.

Standard Procedure
Rarely Verified
Barrel pressure / accuracy
Diopter accuracy
Ammunition consistency
Parallax behavior under stress
Weapon assembly / zeroing
Reticle positioning
Suppressors / rails
Field of view & optical resolution

There Is a Way to Know — Objectively

TPA — Target Precision Analyzer

A compact, fast, and field-ready test unit that checks scopes for:

Certificate Icon

Backed by our commitment to precision and excellence:

No Pressure. Just the Right Question.

Ask the Right Questions

We’re not asking you to buy a system.
We’re asking you to ask this:

“Can our integrators and suppliers verify their optics?”

If not, who takes responsibility when something goes wrong?

"How accurate is your scope?"

Experience the TPA live and discover what objective optics testing really means.