





Night Vision Monocular – 2K/60Hz, 940nm Stealth IR, 45° FOV, 4 Color Modes & Helmet Mount
2K Resolution. 60Hz. 940nm Stealth IR. See 300 Meters in Total Darkness — Undetected.
Most digital night vision monoculars use 850nm infrared illuminators — which produce a faint red glow visible to other people and many animals. This unit uses a 940nm stealth IR illuminator that is completely invisible to the naked eye and to most animals. You illuminate your environment and see clearly at up to 300 meters in total darkness without producing any visible signature. Paired with a 2688×1520 (2K) sensor running at a 60Hz refresh rate — no blur, no lag, no screen-door effect — this is a significant step above the 1080p/30Hz units that dominate this price bracket.
2K / 60Hz — Why Both Numbers Matter
- 📐 2688×1520 (2K) — nearly double the pixel count of 1080p. Target identification, edge definition, and fine detail at distance are all sharper. Visible on moving targets and in cluttered environments like brush and treelines
- 🎬 60Hz refresh rate — the display updates 60 times per second. At 30Hz (standard on competing units), fast movement produces visible motion blur and lag. At 60Hz, motion tracking is smooth and real-time for panning across a field or tracking a moving target
940nm Stealth IR — Invisible Illumination at 300 Meters
The 940nm infrared illuminator operates at a wavelength beyond what human eyes and most animal eyes can detect — no visible glow at night. Standard 850nm units produce a faint red dot visible at close range that spooks light-sensitive game and reveals your position. Three brightness levels let you dial IR intensity to the environment — lower for short distances, higher for maximum 300m range in total darkness.
0.0001 Lux CMOS Sensor — Functions Without IR in Ambient Light
The 0.0001 lux ultra-low-light CMOS sensor captures usable imagery in starlight or moonlight without requiring the IR illuminator — preserving battery life and maintaining zero IR signature. When IR is needed, it augments a sensor that already performs well rather than compensating for a weak base.
4 Color Modes — Adapt to the Environment
- 🟢 Night Green — traditional NVG green phosphor, high contrast in most low-light environments
- ⚪ White Phosphor — cleaner, more natural rendering; easier on the eyes for extended wear and preferred by many operators for target discrimination
- ⬛ Black & White — high contrast monochrome for high-ambient-light environments
- 🔴 Color Mode — reddish-purple tint for environments with some ambient color light
45° Field of View — Wider Situational Awareness
The 45° FOV is wider than the 35–40° typical of competing monoculars in this class. More scene coverage per look means faster threat scanning, better peripheral awareness, and less constant panning in confined spaces.
Helmet Mountable + Handheld
The included helmet mount bracket uses a standard NVG interface compatible with PVS-14-style mounts — hands-free operation for movement, navigation, and weapon handling. Also functions handheld as a traditional monocular for static observation.
HD Recording + Dual Batteries
Onboard HD video recording and photo capture stores to memory card. Two included rechargeable batteries each provide 2–3.5 hours of runtime depending on IR use — up to 7 hours total with both batteries.
Specs at a Glance
- ✅ Resolution: 2688×1520 (2K)
- ✅ Refresh rate: 60Hz
- ✅ Sensor: 0.0001 lux CMOS
- ✅ IR illuminator: 940nm stealth — 3 brightness levels
- ✅ Detection range: 300m in total darkness
- ✅ Field of view: 45°
- ✅ Color modes: 4 (Night Green, White Phosphor, B&W, Color)
- ✅ Magnification: 1× optical / 4× digital
- ✅ Mount: Helmet-mountable (bracket included) + handheld
- ✅ Recording: HD video + photo
- ✅ Batteries: 2 included — 2–3.5 hr each (up to 7 hr total)
Who Uses This
- 🦌 Hunters — coyote, hog, and predator control without spooking game with visible IR
- 🪖 Tactical operators & security — hands-free helmet-mounted NVG for patrol and movement
- 🏠 Property owners — perimeter surveillance and night threat detection
- 🔭 Wildlife observers — nocturnal animal observation without disturbance
- 🎒 Preppers — night observation for grid-down security and perimeter watch
- 🎯 Airsoft & training — realistic NVG training with PVS-14-compatible mount interface
Pro tip: White Phosphor mode is worth trying if you default to Night Green — most users report faster target identification and less eye fatigue on extended wear because white phosphor rendering is closer to natural visual processing. For open moonlit or snow terrain, B&W mode often delivers the sharpest contrast of all four modes.
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