Ocular LED for SG Pulse Pro - Shooters Global
The SG Pulse Pro has built in LEDs that indicate your cant. They work. But they sit on the body of the device, not near your eye. The Ocular LED brings that indication to where you need it most: directly underneath the eyepiece of your scope, in your peripheral vision while looking through the scope. That difference means you can monitor your cant without losing even a fraction of your focus on the target.
How it works
The Ocular LED mounts directly on the eyepiece tube of your riflescope and connects via a cable to the magnetic accessory port on the SG Pulse Pro. Once the Ocular LED is connected, the LEDs on the Pulse Pro itself are disabled. All level indication then runs through the external LEDs near your eye. Green means level. Red means cant. Simple, direct, no interpretation needed.
Visibility
The LEDs are brighter than fibre optic levels. In direct sunlight, where bubble levels and fibre optics are difficult to read, the Ocular LEDs remain clearly visible. Brightness is adjustable through the Pulse Pro. On a sunny outdoor range you turn it up. During night training or dusk you turn it down so the LEDs do not blind you. Ten brightness levels give you the control to get it exactly right.
Magnetic connection
The cable clicks magnetically onto the accessory port of the Pulse Pro. Firm enough to stay in place, but if it gets yanked the magnet releases instead of something breaking. In PRS where you move fast and press your rifle against barricades that is a smart design choice. You lose no parts, you damage nothing.
Requires the SG Pulse Pro
The Ocular LED is an accessory. It does not work standalone. You need an SG Pulse Pro as the base unit. The Pulse Pro handles the sensor readings, the calculations and the drive signal. The Ocular LED is purely the external display of that data in a position where you can see it better.
Who is it for
PRS shooters who already own an SG Pulse Pro and want to bring the level system to the eyepiece for faster feedback. Shooters who struggle to read the Pulse Pro LEDs in their peripheral vision because the device sits too far from their eye. Or anyone who wants to fully utilise the anti-cant function of the Pulse Pro without breaking focus on the target.
Questions about the Ocular LED or the SG Pulse Pro? Get in touch.