Troy Industries remains a titan in the tactical hardware space, largely because they haven’t chased trends. In 2026, their BattleSight ecosystem is still built on the same “over-engineered” aluminum and stainless steel foundations that made them famous.
If you are trying to navigate their catalog, here is the functional breakdown of the current lineup.
1. Deployment: Folding vs. Fixed
The first choice is whether you want your sights to move.
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Folding BattleSights (BUIS): These are the most popular. They sit at a low profile (0.460″) when folded and feature a robust, cross-locking detent. You must manually depress a side button to fold them, ensuring they won’t collapse under recoil or impact.
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Fixed BattleSights: These have no moving parts and are machined from a single block of aluminum. They are lighter and more durable than folding models. They are preferred for “always-on” setups or primary sighting systems.
2. Front Sight Geometry: HK vs. M4
Troy is one of the few brands that allows you to choose your front “tower” style. This is purely a preference for your sight picture.
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HK Style (Hooded): The front post is surrounded by a circular “globe.”
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The Advantage: Speed. Your eye naturally centers the circular front hood inside the circular rear aperture (the “circle-in-a-circle” effect).
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M4 Style (Winged): The front post is protected by two flared “ears,” mimicking the classic military M16/M4 profile.
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The Advantage: Precision. Many shooters find the open top of the M4 wings less distracting for long-range shots.
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3. Rear Aperture: Round vs. Di-Optic (DOA)
Troy offers two ways to look through the rear of the rifle. Both feature a dual-aperture flip (one for 0-300m and one for 300-600m).
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Standard Round: The traditional “ghost ring” circle. It is predictable and works well for everyone.
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Di-Optic (DOA): This features a rhombus/diamond-shaped aperture.
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The Pitch: Troy claims the four corners of the diamond draw the eye to the center faster than a circle.
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The Reality: It is polarizing. Some shooters find it much faster for tactical drills, while others find the diamond shape distracting for precision work.
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4. Height Specs: Standard vs. Micro
This is where most buyers make a mistake. Choosing the wrong one will prevent you from zeroing your rifle.
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Standard Height: Designed for the AR-15 / M4. If your top rail is at a standard height relative to your stock, this is what you need. It co-witnesses perfectly with standard red dot mounts.
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Micro Sights: Designed for raised-rail platforms (like the HK416, SIG MCX, or IWI Tavor). Because these rifles have a rail that sits higher above the barrel, standard sights would be too tall. Micro sights are physically shorter to keep your cheek weld natural.
5. Summary of Models & Pricing (2026 Estimates)
Model Category |
Typical Price (Set) |
Best Use Case |
Folding (Standard) |
$200 – $240 |
Backup for Red Dots/LPVOs on AR-15s. |
Fixed (Standard) |
$140 – $160 |
Duty rifles or minimalist “Irons-Only” builds. |
Micro (Folding) |
$220 – $260 |
High-rail rifles (MCX, HK416, APC9). |
Tritium Upgrades |
+$80 – $100 |
Low-light, home defense, or duty use. |
