I get it for LR target/steel shooting
My annoyance comes from the following:
1. RF binos will always have worse glass due to the arrangement of lenses being sub optimal. I've tried every top tier brand (Leica, Swaro, Ziess , the latter being the worst) and none of them have better or 'as good as' glass compared to the same non-LRF version. Leica has the best arrangement out of the three but I have never liked the ergonomics of Leica binoculars, which is more than half the battle as an unsteady hold means it's pointless to try and range/observe. Swarovski still has the best glass but their LRF binos have always possessed tumours on the underside which does nothing to help the hold.
The lower tier Asian sweat shop assembled binos (Vortex, Sig, Kahles) may be better in terms of the software inside, but the glass isn't even on the same planet. Sorry if you think so, because it means your eyes are fucked.
2. Carting a set of binos; or worse still, a scope, with LRF and ballistics built in, is all well and good until it either stops working (electronic circuits will pack up eventually, not a question of IF but WHEN) or the battery goes flat. Easy enough to carry a spare battery, but try getting the electronics fixed on an older pair of LRF binos. You'll either get a bill which is 40% of a new pair, or the person on the other end of the phone will be saying 'Guys, listen to this mug who wants their 10 year old pair of LRF binos repaired! For free!
'
Sure, Vortex is 'lifetime warranty' but that's been factored into the dealer cost already. You've paid for 2-3x of what a single product would otherwise cost without that warranty.
3. A separate LRF unit is the only logical way to go. Chop and change at anytime without taking a huge hit on resale. Leupold just released a 5k yards handheld LRF...
https://www.leupold.com/rx-5000-tbr-w-rangefinder
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