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Thread: How important LRF in thermal handheld?

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  1. #16
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    Sep 2013
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    Quote Originally Posted by Speargrass View Post
    Get a LRF buy once cry once, but and here's the but. You don't have always sacrifice specs/performance, if you want a work around here are some pointers.
    The LRF is a real advantage but NETD is not the be all and end all neither are pixels but they are a performance indication for sure.
    I would recommend looking at a low base magnification unit something around 1.5 to 2 power this allows you to identify hazards and terrain more easily and it allows rapid scanning and faster target acquisition in the dark.
    A base mag of 3.5 or more can be a total PITA. Avoid it if you can in a hand held. In a scope it's a different matter I won't discuss that here.
    Low NETD is a good guide to performance but it doesn't mean too much until conditions deteriorate most thermals detect, identify and recognise just fine until the weather packs in then a low NETD will perform better.
    More pixels means better resolution but if you want higher magnification in more open country then every time you double the magnification you half the number of pixels you can use.
    Some thermal units come in high base magnification because they provide better resolution for less cost but the downside is loss of performance with scanning and terrain recognition.
    My work around in the early days was using the PIP and a graduated reticle in the PIP of the scope. Check if your hand held has a PIP and some sort of reticle or stadiometric range guide (pulsar do and so should others)
    Most of my deer I shoot under 100 meters I used picture in picture (PIP) till I got LRF.
    I would run the PIP at 6 power and the base at 1.5. I knew from experience that if a reds brisket covered 3 hashes on the PIP it was under 200 meters. If your handheld has something similar it will work as a rough range finder too.
    This technique won't work on rabbits because their size varies so much.
    Hope this helps.
    Edit to add your going to keep that thermal LRF hand held in your vehicle everywhere you go and it'll replace your current range finder 90% of the time but keep in mind no Germanium lens likes being pointed directly into the sun, ever.
    All of the above is on point, I even find a 2.5 magnification a bit high for my liking when I am looking for rabbits in and around hedges.

    Stadia range finding really stuggles with rabbits, as above they vary in size with age, but also from one stance to another. Any length of grass beyond putting green makes it hard to bracket them too.
    Marty Henry likes this.

 

 

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