Syren XLR5 Waterfowler*

$2,325.00$2,545.00

  • AVAILABLE IN RIGHT AND LEFT-HAND OPTIONS
  • COMES WITH HARD CASE, CHOKE TUBES, AND WRENCHES
  • SELECT CONFIGURATIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR DEMO

7 in stock (can be backordered)

Description

The Syren Waterfowler is the best shotgun on the market for women who hunt. She is a bit lighter, and her balance and shortened length-of-pull make it so much easier to pull up when she needs to move quickly in that blind or boat.

 

If you are a Pinterest kind of person you may have heard or seen pictures by the Waterfowl Queen, the Syren Waterfowler is her gun of choice.

 

It has oversized safety and bold levers, and because it was made for a woman’s body and her features substantially lighten recoil if felt at all.

 

Unlike almost every single waterfowler shotgun on the market, this gun was manufactured for the woman’s body and the features that impact her performance.  When shooting a full-size shotgun that was manufactured to accommodate the average man’s build and features, women often feel additional recoil and struggle to pull that shotgun up with ease.  This can often leave her frustrated with her performance.

 

Give us a call to demo this shotgun with one of our demo representatives!

 

For additional spec information please give us a call or go directly to Syren’s website at https://syrenusa.com/syren-xlr5-waterfowler/

Additional information

Cast

Right-Hand, Left-Hand

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What should I consider when choosing lens filtrations?
4 criteria to consider:

  1. Environment – Where are you using the lens? The desert, the woods, open fields?
  2. Lighting Condition – Full Sun, Medium Light, Low Light, Overcast, at Night, Indoors?
  3. Activity – Clay Shooting Sports, Hunting, Sport Specific
  4. Filter Color – The base filter color value is a real benefit to recognize. Some athletes see better with for example more lift in “Red” with lens while others need less and more balance approaches to color.

Each of these lens criteria are detailed in each lens filtration product and you can use the filtering capability on the component lens page to narrow your lens options, selecting each data point. If you are building a kit but do not yet know which lenses you would like, visit the lens component page for the glasses series you are wanting to purchase and use the filtering to narrow your selections.

Does eye color make a difference?
Athletes with lighter color eyes tend to be more light sensitive than athletes with darker eyes… So low transmittance values (meaning darker lenses) in the lens offering will tend to be very comfortable for light colored eye athletes. Dark color eye athletes will tend to want a bit more transmittance value and are less light sensitive so they can benefit from less dark filter profiles and more light traveling through the lens.

How is performance affected in different filtrations?
Our lens technology provides technical achievement across all transmittance values from full sun to low light. The ability to accelerate color lift has more realized performance in darker lenses as there is more pigment tuning technology in a darker lens. So if the athlete is looking for more demonstrated “Lift” or “Change” in color – darker value lenses provide more of a significant change in the sight picture for the athlete. For athletes looking for a rich color and very balanced lens, you should look to stay with the “ED” lens profiles as these provide lift to the entire color spectrum and provide extremely detailed sight pictures. The entire sight picture becomes more vibrant and defined with any of our lens technologies, but usage occasion can be specifically detailed with our lens selector for each model.

How can I tell which lenses are best for which environments?
The environment that you are using our lens technology in is quite important as the lens filter or the way we manipulate color or elevate or decrease color provides significant benefits to the athlete using the lenses. Our lenses are classified with the following designations:

Enhanced Definition – “ED” – these lenses are a balanced color lift where we concentrate on making the entire visual picture more vibrant across the complete color spectrum.

High Contrast – “HC” – these utilize a mix of color values across the visual spectrum to create more contrast and separation between the intended target or environment, so the sight picture has separation between color.

Neutralizers – “N” – these are special utility lenses where the design of the lens is specifically engineered to suppress greens and elevate specific values in the visual color spectrum to intensify various colors.

Max Lift – “M” lenses – these are lenses specifically engineered to elevate the orange piece of the visual spectrum. We have many lenses that use this technical filter profile to dial up orange recognition and intensity. The amount of lift between lenses using “M” or “Max” filters is different by lens transmittance with some being more intense than others. The darker the lens the more pop you will get but even our high transmittance lenses provide a nice rich color enhancement in the orange piece of the spectrum. The Max technology can spike pieces of the visual spectrum by over 600%. This is a huge advantage for athletes looking for quick acquisition of the intended reference target.

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What should I consider when choosing lens filtrations?
4 criteria to consider:

  1. Environment – Where are you using the lens? The desert, the woods, open fields?
  2. Lighting Condition – Full Sun, Medium Light, Low Light, Overcast, at Night, Indoors?
  3. Activity – Clay Shooting Sports, Hunting, Sport Specific
  4. Filter Color – The base filter color value is a real benefit to recognize. Some athletes see better with for example more lift in “Red” with lens while others need less and more balance approaches to color.

Each of these lens criteria are detailed in each lens filtration product and you can use the filtering capability on the component lens page to narrow your lens options, selecting each data point. If you are building a kit but do not yet know which lenses you would like, visit the lens component page for the glasses series you are wanting to purchase and use the filtering to narrow your selections.

Does eye color make a difference?
Athletes with lighter color eyes tend to be more light sensitive than athletes with darker eyes… So low transmittance values (meaning darker lenses) in the lens offering will tend to be very comfortable for light colored eye athletes. Dark color eye athletes will tend to want a bit more transmittance value and are less light sensitive so they can benefit from less dark filter profiles and more light traveling through the lens.

How is performance affected in different filtrations?
Our lens technology provides technical achievement across all transmittance values from full sun to low light. The ability to accelerate color lift has more realized performance in darker lenses as there is more pigment tuning technology in a darker lens. So if the athlete is looking for more demonstrated “Lift” or “Change” in color – darker value lenses provide more of a significant change in the sight picture for the athlete. For athletes looking for a rich color and very balanced lens, you should look to stay with the “ED” lens profiles as these provide lift to the entire color spectrum and provide extremely detailed sight pictures. The entire sight picture becomes more vibrant and defined with any of our lens technologies, but usage occasion can be specifically detailed with our lens selector for each model.

How can I tell which lenses are best for which environments?
The environment that you are using our lens technology in is quite important as the lens filter or the way we manipulate color or elevate or decrease color provides significant benefits to the athlete using the lenses. Our lenses are classified with the following designations:

Enhanced Definition – “ED” – these lenses are a balanced color lift where we concentrate on making the entire visual picture more vibrant across the complete color spectrum.

High Contrast – “HC” – these utilize a mix of color values across the visual spectrum to create more contrast and separation between the intended target or environment, so the sight picture has separation between color.

Neutralizers – “N” – these are special utility lenses where the design of the lens is specifically engineered to suppress greens and elevate specific values in the visual color spectrum to intensify various colors.

Max Lift – “M” lenses – these are lenses specifically engineered to elevate the orange piece of the visual spectrum. We have many lenses that use this technical filter profile to dial up orange recognition and intensity. The amount of lift between lenses using “M” or “Max” filters is different by lens transmittance with some being more intense than others. The darker the lens the more pop you will get but even our high transmittance lenses provide a nice rich color enhancement in the orange piece of the spectrum. The Max technology can spike pieces of the visual spectrum by over 600%. This is a huge advantage for athletes looking for quick acquisition of the intended reference target.