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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
Rangefinder recommendation
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<blockquote data-quote="WahooYahoo" data-source="post: 2471796" data-attributes="member: 94632"><p>1400 yds on a coyote is impressive!. Texas Rotes are pretty small. There are factors that lessen the value of the BD. If the animal is on a hillside with a bid rock behind it, it won't matter as much. You will get a range reflection from the big rock a few yards behind it and all is well. If the coyote at 1400 was on a cut corn field, it is the only object to reflect the beam, so it may be fine too. Add some clutter or a few objects along the path and the beam divergence is paramount. The steel plates are reflective like that big rock. </p><p></p><p>I have a buddy that prefers to tinker with the apps and inputs. He uses an older Leica, 2600 I believe. I'm good with that. It's his hunt. My BR4 shines over everything I've used. Admittedly, my last was BR2500 and it was the best I'd used until the BR4. I tried the Leica and sig before that. The best and newest Leica I've seen has to link with a kestrel, except the blue-tooth has a nasty habit of failing. Maybe they've come out with a new one. </p><p></p><p>By comparison, BR4 is remarkably better than everything else<strong> I've</strong> seen. It's simple to use, stand alone, fast and dead on accurate. YMMV.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WahooYahoo, post: 2471796, member: 94632"] 1400 yds on a coyote is impressive!. Texas Rotes are pretty small. There are factors that lessen the value of the BD. If the animal is on a hillside with a bid rock behind it, it won't matter as much. You will get a range reflection from the big rock a few yards behind it and all is well. If the coyote at 1400 was on a cut corn field, it is the only object to reflect the beam, so it may be fine too. Add some clutter or a few objects along the path and the beam divergence is paramount. The steel plates are reflective like that big rock. I have a buddy that prefers to tinker with the apps and inputs. He uses an older Leica, 2600 I believe. I'm good with that. It's his hunt. My BR4 shines over everything I've used. Admittedly, my last was BR2500 and it was the best I'd used until the BR4. I tried the Leica and sig before that. The best and newest Leica I've seen has to link with a kestrel, except the blue-tooth has a nasty habit of failing. Maybe they've come out with a new one. By comparison, BR4 is remarkably better than everything else[B] I've[/B] seen. It's simple to use, stand alone, fast and dead on accurate. YMMV. [/QUOTE]
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Rangefinder recommendation
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