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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
N Vision Halo XRF vs N Vision Halo LR
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<blockquote data-quote="Nate60x" data-source="post: 2358816" data-attributes="member: 117920"><p>I have had the XRF for a few months now and thought I would share a few of my thoughts for anyone considering one. My previous scope was an N-vision Halo Lr, overall I liked the scope, but there were a few things that bothered me. </p><p></p><p>What I liked about the Halo LR:</p><p>Great Picture</p><p>Reliable Zero</p><p>User Friendly, pretty intuitive controls</p><p></p><p>What I didn't like:</p><p>My biggest complaint and the reason I upgraded was the 1 moa click value when zeroing the weapon, the inability to fine tune your zero(especially left/right) held this scope back </p><p>Eats cr123 batteries especially in the cold</p><p>no rangefinder</p><p>no internal video</p><p>controls were a little difficult to find with gloves on</p><p></p><p>There were pretty simple solutions for most of the things I didn't like about the LR, and I enjoyed hunting with the scope. I used an external battery pack, a mini dvr, and a silencerco radius rangefinder and was pretty happy with the setup. What I didn't like about it was all of the extra weight on the gun and more importantly amount of cords I had dangling around. The biggest issue in running the external pack is the connection to the scope. If you slam on your brakes to avoid smashing into a deer and your gun goes flying off of the back seat onto the floor, you might break that connection, ask me how I know.</p><p></p><p>Now on to the XRF:</p><p>Same great picture, some say better, but I cant tell the difference between the two</p><p>Same reliable zero</p><p>Same User Friendly Menu</p><p></p><p>And the XRF fixes every single one of my dislikes on the LR:</p><p></p><p>Batteries are 18650's which are non proprietary, cheap, and rechargable</p><p>Built in rangefinder, works great</p><p>Internal Video</p><p>Controls are easier to find and use with gloves</p><p>And they made it possible to fine tune your zero. When sighting in your weapon, if you zero on base mag the click value is 1 moa, If you zero on 2x mag the click value is .5 moa, 4x=.25 moa, 8x=.125 moa. </p><p></p><p></p><p>The scope has been great, I am extremely happy with the purchase and look forward to hunting with it more this year.</p><p></p><p>Here are a couple videos:</p><p></p><p>[MEDIA=youtube]DbJIjQYyQV4[/MEDIA]</p><p></p><p>[MEDIA=youtube]nut86Oi8kQc[/MEDIA]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nate60x, post: 2358816, member: 117920"] I have had the XRF for a few months now and thought I would share a few of my thoughts for anyone considering one. My previous scope was an N-vision Halo Lr, overall I liked the scope, but there were a few things that bothered me. What I liked about the Halo LR: Great Picture Reliable Zero User Friendly, pretty intuitive controls What I didn't like: My biggest complaint and the reason I upgraded was the 1 moa click value when zeroing the weapon, the inability to fine tune your zero(especially left/right) held this scope back Eats cr123 batteries especially in the cold no rangefinder no internal video controls were a little difficult to find with gloves on There were pretty simple solutions for most of the things I didn't like about the LR, and I enjoyed hunting with the scope. I used an external battery pack, a mini dvr, and a silencerco radius rangefinder and was pretty happy with the setup. What I didn't like about it was all of the extra weight on the gun and more importantly amount of cords I had dangling around. The biggest issue in running the external pack is the connection to the scope. If you slam on your brakes to avoid smashing into a deer and your gun goes flying off of the back seat onto the floor, you might break that connection, ask me how I know. Now on to the XRF: Same great picture, some say better, but I cant tell the difference between the two Same reliable zero Same User Friendly Menu And the XRF fixes every single one of my dislikes on the LR: Batteries are 18650's which are non proprietary, cheap, and rechargable Built in rangefinder, works great Internal Video Controls are easier to find and use with gloves And they made it possible to fine tune your zero. When sighting in your weapon, if you zero on base mag the click value is 1 moa, If you zero on 2x mag the click value is .5 moa, 4x=.25 moa, 8x=.125 moa. The scope has been great, I am extremely happy with the purchase and look forward to hunting with it more this year. Here are a couple videos: [MEDIA=youtube]DbJIjQYyQV4[/MEDIA] [MEDIA=youtube]nut86Oi8kQc[/MEDIA] [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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N Vision Halo XRF vs N Vision Halo LR
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