The battery will drop right in, the cap will screw closed, and the sight will function fine with the single 123 battery. It won't fit with the plastic coating, peel it off and expose the metal out jacket. The Mark III is a group 4 sight and orignially ran on two 1.5V "button" cells, a single 123 provides the same 3V the sight requires and occupies about the same space. No, the 1/3N battery is a 3V cell and works for Group 2 sights. Mine has worked fine this way for years.Īre you saying the CR123 cell contains 1/3N cells? To remove you have to shake the sight a little but they do drop out. Peel off the plastic outer coating of the 123 battery, they will slide right in. for sale is a vintage aimpoint electronic mark iii red dot scope(circa 1983-1986) this does not include batteries but this unit is tested and works as it should It is in excellent condition considering its age. Hell, in the 20 years since I used it, it's been stored without batteries, and although the outside got beat up in my toolbox, it seems like a waste to toss it.Īnyone have one that can steer me the right way for either the correct batteries, or the like? Also, the way the little decal says to seat them, it doesn't seem like they should fit that way. Micro® T-2 Red Dot Reflex Sight - B&T Lever Release Mount and 30mm Scope Ring with Picatinny Interface.
Problem is, the 123s are such a tight fit, I can't get them to seat in the battery tube.
It looks like it takes 1/3N, which are now CR123s. INTRASYSTEM ELECTROMAGNETIC COMPATIBILITY ANALYSIS PROGRAM VOLUME II. I have an old Aimpoint Mark III, bought it maybe in 1988 or so. CD 9702 ADVANCED ECM ANTENNA SYSTEMS : PART 1 ARTICLE FROM ELECTRONIC WARFARE.