Sunday, December 25, 2011

Bushnell Fusion 1600 ARC Laser Rangefinder Binocular

VIEWING AND RANGEFINDING PERFECTION, TOGETHER AT LAST. The ultimate in efficiency, our new Fusion 1600 ARC melds the best of Bushnell® binoculars with world-leading laser rangefinding capabilities. And it's no larger or heavier than a pair of 10x 42mm binoculars. Every detail is magnified with rich contrast and stunning clarity from edge to edge using premium fully multi-coated optics and BaK-4 prisms. At the push of a button, it displays exact distance to your target from 10 to 1600 yards. Built-in ARC Bow and Rifle Modes deliver the "shoots-like" horizontal distance, plus bullet-drop and holdover information. With new Vivid Display Technology, RainGuard® HD antifog coating and a fully waterproof design to ensure reliability and clarity in all conditions. It's the best of all worlds Bushnell, in your hands and at your command.

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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Cheap Used Laser Rangefinders Deals

www.myrangerfinder.com The best Digital Range Finder can be found online for less than you might pay at the golf store. I share how it has helped my game and what I've learned at my blog, http

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Friday, December 16, 2011

AIM 10-40X50 Dual Illuminated Full Size Rangefinder Scope

!±8±AIM 10-40X50 Dual Illuminated Full Size Rangefinder Scope

Brand : AIM
Rate :
Price : $120.24
Post Date : Dec 16, 2011 09:24:40
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



All Metal Construction & very rigid built. Multi-layer Emerald Bright Coatings for Optimum Light Transmission. Five Levels of Brightness for Red and Green make this scope extremely effective under low light condition.

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The Most Powerful Telescope Will Fit Into Your Pocket

!±8± The Most Powerful Telescope Will Fit Into Your Pocket

Shrinking the Telescope - "Astronomers in the last 50 years have made wondrous discoveries, expanded our understanding of the universe and opened humanity's vision beyond the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Our knowledge of how the cosmos was born and how many of its phenomena arise has grown exponentially in just one human lifetime. In spite of these great strides there remain fundamental questions that are largely unanswered. To further our understanding of the way our present universe formed following the Big Bang requires a new type of Observatory having capabilities currently unavailable in either existing ground-based or space telescopes."

The bigger is better concept is so embodied within our consciousness, that just the idea of smaller more efficient telescope seems to defy all the laws of science. Yet, science always supports Miniature Size Telescopes. It is, however, the lock of understanding of the fundamental principle of focus that has deprives us over the centuries. Research in this field has provided a full understanding of the science behind optical telescope operation that has contributed to the design of the next generation of telescopes. The introduction size of miniature telescope will be the size of a viewfinder now used on present telescopes. Yet, these new generation of telescopes will posses resolving powerful greater than even the largest known telescope.

Technique in lens and mirror manufacturing has improved significantly over the centuries. With the aid of computers, lasers, and robotics technologies, optics can be made with precision accuracy. Eventually, the size of telescopes will reduce to wearable instrument as small as a pair of eyeglasses, in the not so distance future. Telescopes will soon be comprised of very small (a few centimeters in length) tubes fitted into a headgear. They will have the advantage of precise movement and shock absorbent the human head provides. Wide field of view similar to that of the naked eye, impressive focus, infinite magnification (limited only by light pollution and disturbance), and brightness allowing snap shot color photographing and live video recording. Headgear will be convenient, efficient, and versatile. The design reserves the potential to be up-graded and customized. After almost 400 years of telescope development, we finally have a revolutionary breakthrough now capable of reshaping telescopes science and create revolutionary optical devices to shrink football size telescopes to a view finder, and eventually into a pair of glasses. Welcome to the new age of telescope technology.

The Impossible Made Possible - As our technological achievements shape the future, we find ways to make the impossible possible. We constantly improve existing technology by making them smaller and more efficient. In many cases, smaller more integrated designs increase the wide category of efficiencies. We are now capable of manufacturing instruments on a microscopic scale, with the exception of the optical telescope. Optical telescope is the only instrument that actually grows in size rather then shrink. As we advance in research and development of these instruments, they grow larger in size with each new generation. It is every astronomer dream to have access to a high resolving power telescope, yet small enough to be portable.

However, it is embedded in our minds that we are unable to increase resolution with reduced size in a single design. In relation to this, engineers continue to build bigger and bigger instruments, creating monsters and giants. The reason Miniature Size Telescope is considered impossible lies not only with optical science, but also with unclear understanding of the principle of light. We still don't understand the complex interaction involved in both viewing and capturing images, until now. It is for this uncertainty, why we still use two different theories of light. Light is viewed as a particle that accelerates from point A to point B, and light is also viewed as waves that transmit by means of wave motion. Where one theory fails to make sense, the other is applied. Miniature Size Telescope is base on 'Unify Theory of Light'.

The Science - Our eyes are very unique: a young person's pupil dilates between 2 and 7 millimeters, yet, the eye posses the ability to view images several thousands meters in diameter. Our wide field of view provides convincing evidence that we view converging image rays and not parallel rays. Converging image rays obeys the inverse square law of electromagnetic radiation. Converging rays describe rays that convert towards a point. Therefore, image carried by these rays reduce their cross sectional area with distance travel. Images collected by the largest telescope aperture, actually enters the few millimeters of our eyes. Small sight angle (true field) at seconds of a degree, so small the brain finds it difficult to isolate the details they contain for recognition, when they are factored into our full field of view. These small-angles of information get compressed within our large field of view, and appear to be just a small spot or become invisible.

Nevertheless, magnification provides the means by which small sight angles are converted into larger ones. A refractor telescope with an aperture of 30 millimeters and 120 millimeters focal length (focal ratio f/4), providing a magnifying power of 5x times and will have an exit pupil of 5 millimeters. This is a very bright telescope, tapping close the maximum of 7 millimeters opening of the pupil. If a second telescope was constructed, having identical aperture size of 30 millimeters, but have a focal length of 1200 millimeters (f/40). The magnifying power will be 50x times. Instead of a 5 millimeters exit pupil, such telescope will now have an exit pupil of only 0.5 millimeter. From the same formula, to obtain a 50x times magnifying power and an exit pupil of 5 millimeters, the aperture needed is 300 millimeters.

Refractor telescopes cannot obtain a 7 millimeters exit pupil without being affected by aberrations. In order to overcome this, telescope designers attempt to allocate a balance between magnification and brightness. Resolving power describes this balance. The compromise will reduce brightness, but increase magnification power and image clarity by the same proportion. The ocular plays an important role in finalizing the image of the apparent field. They are capable of influencing field of view, magnification, and exit pupil (brightness). A short focal length ocular will provide a large magnifying power, small field of view, and short exit pupil; while, a long focal length ocular will provide a small magnifying power, large field of view, and long exit pupil. From this example, one can see that magnification is inversely proportional the diameter of the exit pupil, and exit pupil is directly proportional to brightness.

From the bigger is better formula, we know that by increasing the aperture of the objective, we can increase the exit pupil and thus the brightness of the image. There are several optical design aberrations that set restriction on modem telescope design. In designing optical systems, the optical engineer must make tradeoffs in controlling aberrations to achieve the desired result. Aberrations are any errors that result in the imperfection of an image. Such errors can result from design or fabrication or both.

Achromatic lenses are developed to reduce color aberration created whenever white light is refracted, but with even the best designs, color aberration cannot be totally eliminated. Color aberration also consists of a secondary effect called the secondary spectrum. The longer the focal ratio, the fainter the secondary spectrum becomes. Color aberration limits most refractors to a focal ratio of f/15. Reflectors, which is less affected by color aberration, has focal ration of f/5 for commercial design and f/2.5 for professional designs. Within known telescope design, the different conditions necessary for image perfection is integrated, thus forcing engineers to compromise to obtain a close balance that will render the best possible image.

What if magnification, focus, and brightness could be separated? The new formula for âEUR~Miniature Size Telescopes' isolates each of these factors and allow each to be independently tuned for maximum efficiency.

The Desire for Magnifying Power- "The Overwhelmingly Large Telescope (Owl) is an awesome project, which requires international effort. This huge telescope main mirror would be more than 100 meters in diameters and will have resolution 40 times better than the Hubble Space Telescope. This is a telescope with a primary mirror the size of a foot ball field."

The need for greater magnifying power started with the Galilean design. Research and experiments to improve the telescope's magnification shows that increase in magnification power is directly proportional to the difference in the focal length of the objective and the ocular (eyepiece), where the ocular focal length is the shorter of the two. The race to build the most powerful telescope started at an early age in telescope development. The greatest minds at the time compete to dominate the shaping of this new technology.

During this era, telescope tubes were made very long. At times, these tubes reach length that renders them unstable. In some cases the tubes were removed from the instrument's design. Tubeless telescopes were called aerial telescopes. As telescope Engineers compete to develop more powerful telescopes, they unknowingly encountered a secondary problem that limits the length and magnification of these early 'refractor' telescope designs. They notice that images became darken with increase magnification. Some how, magnification was reducing the amount of light entering and or exiting the telescope lenses. The explanation for this phenomenon, was that enough light wasn't exiting the telescope's ocular, as enough light wasn't been collected at the objective. An increase in the aperture size increases the exit pupil and the problem of dark image with magnification was solved.

At this stage in telescope development, only Keplerian and Galilean 'refractor' telescopes were invented. Lens making was in its early stages and it was difficult to manufacture quality lenses. Large aperture lenses were even a bigger challenge. Refractor telescope soon reach its' size limitation, but now that the second section to the formula for high resolving power is known, reflector telescope of several variations was born.

To date, almost 400 years later, the same formula is still used. Modem improvements simply increase the quality of the optics now use, where modification minimized aberrations. We can now build larger telescopes with resolving power and brightness never taught possible in the time of Galileo, but the formula used in developing these modem instruments is the same as the earliest designs-bigger is better. The bigger is better formula is not without limitations. For example, color aberration limits the brightness of a refractor telescope, which requires a focal ratio of f/I 5 to filter out secondary spectrum aberration. The required focal ratio limits the light collecting capabilities of refractors. Reflectors are not affected by secondary spectrum effect. Focal ratio in the range of ff2.5 is reasonable when requiring exit pupil close to 7 millimeters. However, any attempt to increase magnification within these reflector telescopes while maintaining brightness, will require increase in the aperture and the focal length in the same proportion. It is these design features that makes the phrase âEUR~bigger is better' so convincing.

Previous Limitations - Understanding of the principle of light has rewarded us with the development of modern optical technology. The present article is written to introduce a breakthrough in research and development of Small Powerful Telescopes. Most major telescope manufactures will inform you that magnification is not of significant importance; and that brightness is a more pronounce concern a buyer should have when shopping for a telescope. Magnification and brightness are equally important for viewing and capturing distant images, but the most important factor in rendering details in an image, is focus. Of all the fundamental principles involve in capturing an image, focus is less understood. The awareness of an image focal point and how to achieve a focus image can be easily calculated, but what are the electrodynamics interactions that composed a focus image is still unanswered.

All optical instruments are design around focus; therefore it will always be a top priority in the formation of clear image. Magnification and brightness are of secondary importance, they are the result after focus is achieved. It is the critical distance of focus that determine the maximum magnification and brightness at which an image will be clearly viewed. Magnification describes the action of converting smaller sight angles (true field) into larger ones (apparent field), this provide change in the angle at which the image rays are received, thus, tricking the brain into believing that the object is either closer or larger then it really is. If it wasn't for the need for focus, a single convex lens âEUR"a magnifier-would be a telescope capable of infinite zoom magnification, through the action of simply varying the distance it is held from the eye. Unfortunately, however, there is a critical distant at which images are focus through a single lens or even a system of lenses. This is also known as the critical distance of focus.

What is focus? Webster's Dictionary: fo-cus; is the distinctness or clarity with which an optical system renders an image.

Four Hundred Years History - The discovery of distant magnification was by accident. Early lens maker, Jan Lippershey was experimenting with two different lenses when he discovered the effect of distant magnification. He found that by holding a negative lens close to the eye while holding a positive lens in alignment with the first, away from the eye, that distant objects appeared much closer than they would with the naked eye. Since then, research to understand and explain the science behind these magical devices is still being attempted. Even with today's technology, telescope designers are still faced with major design limitations and challenges that forge a compromise between telescope size, brightness, and image clarity. Scientists have always been puzzled by the nature of light. Sir Isaac Newton regards light as stream of tiny particles traveling in straight line. Dutch scientist Christian Huygens, on the other hand, believed that light consisted of waves in a substance called the ether, which he supposed fill space, including a vacuum. Huygens concept became accepted as the better theory of the two. Today, however, scientists believe that light consist of a stream of tiny wave pockets of energy called photons.

The Bigger is Better Formula - "With a telescope that has 10 times the collecting area of every telescope ever built. You would be able to go down several thousand times fainter than the faintest thing you see with todayâEUR~s telescopes."

The formula that shaped known telescopes over the centuries of development is pretty basic, well known, and proven- bigger is better. This is the same as saying that larger aperture provides brighter image, while longer focal length provides greater magnification. Even so, is this formula written in stone? Let's put the formula to the test. Can large magnification be obtained without long focal length objective? The answer is yes. Microscopes provide very large magnification with relatively short focal length objective. Is it possible to collect light without very large aperture size? Again, the answer is yes. Microscope also demonstrates this. Then why is it that microscopes provide great magnification with adequate brightness at a relatively small size, while telescopes cannot? This shows that it isn't the law of magnification nor brightness, but it the instrument's design limitations that insist on the concept that bigger is better. A basic Keplerian design telescope operates as a microscope when viewed through the other end of the tube. From the fact that telescopes are basically an inverted microscope, one can see the close relationship between the two.

An international standard full size student microscope provides as much as 400x magnifying power, yet such a microscope consists of a tube less then 20 centimeter in length. Sufficient light is reflected from its' plain-o-convex mirror less than 7 centimeters in diameter. In order to obtain identical brightness and magnifying power in a telescope, focal ratio of f/2.5 is recommended for an exit pupil close to 7 millimeters. Such telescope will require an aperture of 320 centimeters (3.2 meters) and a focal length of 800 centimeters (8 meters), calculating roughly with a 20 millimeters ocular. This is an increase of almost 50x in size. This shows that brightness is not limited to large aperture, nor magnification limited to long focal length. However, the 'bigger is better' formula is a design limitation that surface only in distant magnification. Focusing of distant images is more challenging than focusing of close-up images. We can prove this with a single magnifying lens that is held close to the eye. Objects further then 2/3 the focal length of the lens will be out of focus.

All optical systems are design around focus. In order to vary magnification and brightness, focus has to be constant. We may compromise magnification for brightness and visa- a- verse, but we can never compromise focus. Therefore, instead of saying that magnification M is inversely proportional to brightness, it is also accurate to say that magnification M is equal to focus divided by brightness B, where focus is a constant D.

M = D/B

Magnification power (M) = focus constant (D) / Brightness (B) Within know optical telescope design, all three factors are integrated. Focus has been the primary factor for rendering a clear image, while magnification and brightness both serves as a secondary factor in the appearance of a focused image. For known optical systems, focus, brightness, and magnification are inseparable. The resolving power is used to sum up the performance of a telescope. It is established by the telescope's ability to imprint details within an image. A picture is the imprint of individual dots that comes together to form a complete picture. Magnifying a picture involve stretching these dots. Light magnification is much different from picture magnification, and magnifies by changing the angle of the received image light.

But there is the breakthrough question, what if these three important factors could be isolated and individually tuned? Hm mm. Telescope engineering will not be the same again, and the science of astronomy will explode.


The Most Powerful Telescope Will Fit Into Your Pocket

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Create An Article Reference Box That Calls To Readers

!±8± Create An Article Reference Box That Calls To Readers

There are two primary factors in creating a successful reference box, also called a bio box, that get the results you want from your Internet-posted articles. The first is adding the right keywords into the language. Second, is to write tiny ads that led to a call to action. Neither is going to be easy, but both are necessary and accomplishable.

Let's walk through the process together, and I will give you a few techniques that have brought me large responses and click through rates of upwards of 45%, sometimes even higher, when averages usually run under 8%.

Beginning with understanding what an Internet article is and its intention, creates a starting point for both of us. Let's begin there. Simply, distribution of these articles is solely for electronic publishing. Guidelines from publishers prefer 500 to 1400 word counts with an average of 700 to 800. Creative intentions range from building an expertise in a particular market, topic or industry, a taste of a topic for marketing of a product, or as a paid writing gig for others, so that they may complete one of the other previously mentioned intentions. Publishing can occur inside a newsletter, also called an ezine or electronic newsletter, or be published on a website. Each has its own pros and cons. Website posting does tip the scale higher on the pro side.

The next thought process moves us up the railing to knowing what action you want the reader to take. This ties in with your intention and also making it a reasonable request. Reasonable means not asking for the reader to leap and buy a product or service based on the small amount of information given in the reference box. For coaches or consultants, it's even a leap for readers to commit to a complimentary session based on that small amount of information. A reference box builds only one point, far from the seven to ten-points needed before people take an action that calls for a higher commitment. Selling too soon always turns off an action request.

Since publishers usually don't allow more than five 60-character lines or 450 or less characters, focus is best limited to one action request. The request usually requires a "click here to" request, for instance:

* visit website for more information about product, service, workshop, seminar, conference

* consider subscribing to

* find out more about the author

* call us for (something beneficial and free)

A reference box needs to have the following basics:

1. The author's name and background expertise on the topic.

2. The call to action request.

3. A benefit for readers to take the action.

4. Keywords for search engine optimization (SEO).

Developing the author's name and expertise sentence is easy and the call to action addressed, let's move to the remaining two items: benefit and keywords. Take the major benefit for one of your calls to action. Here is an example of a short-list of benefits to being a subscriber of my nonfiction for-profit monthly newsletter:

* Learn additional avenues to make money with your writing

* Explore and improve your nonfiction for-profit writing skills and techniques

* A metacenter site to find resources to ease your journey in this area

How-to details on finding your features and benefits are available at the Abundance Center's website.

Continue to create five or more benefit lines for each of your action requests, products and services. You will be able to use these in multiple places, not just your reference box. The benefit line or phrase in the reference box needs to build a curiosity or draws readers to want to click and find out more. If the reader sees the benefit as somewhat unbelievable, whether true or not, isn't always the best way to get the preferred action. Sometimes it's best to downplay the benefit, yet continue to make impact. For example, articles I've written were published thousands of times over the past year. Instead, it's best for me to adopt the term, prolific writer. Hype is a big turnoff for sophisticated readers.

We have walked through the who and expertise lines, created benefit lines, next you will want to create a list of keywords for the topic, service and product, then sprinkle them into the resource box information.

Keywords help Net visitors find your article (and you) and the website where the article is posted. Keywords are words people would search on to find information on that topic. Using the keyword finder on Google or the new Amazon search engine is one way to find what people search on most frequently. However, the finder is limited to last month's searches. The key finders will give you hints, however, I believe your common sense will do the same. Additional information on finding keywords are available in articles section of the Abundance Center or search on "keywords" "how to" "article" in Google.

Another tip, slightly outside the scope of this topic, which will help the attractiveness of your article, is not to use the same reference box, or bio box, repeatedly in all articles. Density is important to increase attraction from the search engines yet too much of a good thing shoots you in the foot too. Too much density means 25 or more exactly the same. Changing the benefit line, call to action, and keywords broadens your exposure as well as the opportunity for searchers to find the website that your article is posted -- one key purpose people publish and host your article.

Writing tight copy, including a reference box, always requires more time and focus even for the best writers. Be patient through the development. Review other reference boxes for likes and dislikes. More importantly, be creative and test the response rate occasionally if article writing is a major part of your marketing program.

In summary, the reference box provides author's name and tied-in expertise, the major benefit for clicking and an appropriate call to action that is reasonable for someone reading the article. The sprinkle in or substitute search engine optimizing keywords into the resource box to increase exposure and attractiveness for both yourself and whoever is publishing your articles.


Create An Article Reference Box That Calls To Readers

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Medal of Honor Beta: All Offensive Scorechains

A vid of all the offensive scorechains. Sniper kit with M24, HP scope, Rangefinder and HP ammo. 35 killstreak and 1041 scorechain. The song used is Saki Kaska by Callista but most of you will remember it as the club music in the upper level of Afterlife in ME2. Listing of Offensive Scorechains: SC1: Mortar Strike (40 points) SC2: Rocket Strike (100 Points) SC3: Missile Attack (160 points) SC4: Artillery Strike (230 Points) SC5: Strafing Run (300 points) SC6. Air Strike (380 points) SC7: Cruise Missile (450 points)

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Crosman Phantom Scope Shots

I have never tried scope shots before, so I took my Crosman Phantom and set up targets 20 yards away and shot them with .177 cal. beeman hollow points.

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

M14 M1A Mount 10-40x50 Rangefinder Rifle scope combo set Free sunshade

!±8± M14 M1A Mount 10-40x50 Rangefinder Rifle scope combo set Free sunshade

Brand : Combat Optical | Rate : | Price : $149.75
Post Date : Nov 22, 2011 14:43:01 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days


M14/M1A rifle scope combo set. This combo set include one 10-40x50 rangefinder rifle scope with free sunshade, free low ring and free high ring (you have 2 set of scope rings to fit your need). It also come with Mil-Spec M14/M1A Scope Mount ,Third Generation Two-Point Mount. Requires No Gunsmithing. For .308 / 7.62x51mm Springfield, Fulton, LRB, M1A Rifles. Scope spec: All Metal Construction & very rigid built Multi-layer Emerald Bright Coatings for Optimum Light Transmission 5 Levels of Brightness for Red and Green make this scope work effectively under low light condition Rugged One Piece Tube Construction for ALL Weather Windage and elevation housing features machine plate controlled seals, to eliminate risk of water ingress and foggy Feature 1/8 M.O.A windage and elevation adjustment with audible clicks for greater precision Shock proof, water proof and fog proof Nitrogen-purged and exceeds 99.9% 1" Nitrogen filled tube give you the best view through the scope Protective pop-up lens (included) Operated by CR2032 Battery (included) Brand Name: AIM SPORTS INC. Detail Spec: Reticle Type: Rangefinder Illuminated Type: Red/Green Objective Diameter: 50mm Tube Diameter: 1? Length: 15.5 inch Weight: 25.5oz Magnification: 10-40x Field of View: 1.1°(10x) ? 2.5°(40x) Exit Pupil: 5mm ? 1.3mm Eye Relief: 3.25" Brightness setting: 5 Red / 5 Green Adjustment: 1/8" Click @ 100 yards Color: Anodized Matte Black Battery: 1 x CR2032 (Included) Ring: Heave duty high ring included

More Specification..!!

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Slow Motion Airgun Rabbit Hunting #10

Equipment used: Air Arms S410 C .177 (Sub 12ft lbs) Gary Can custom stock, MTC Mamba 4-16x50, Casio EX-ZR100 on home made mount, MTC 5-700 Laser Range finder, Harris Swivel Bi pod, Pellets: .177 JSB Exacts 4.53

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Simmons Laser Rangefinder

!±8±Simmons Laser Rangefinder

Brand : Simmons
Rate :
Price : $105.00
Post Date : Oct 23, 2011 06:36:40
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



Simmons Laser Rangefinders recalibrate with every shot, giving you hair-splitting +/- 1-yard accuracy. It features an in-view LCD that provides the exact distance to your target from 5-600 yards with the tap of a single button. With 4x magnification and bright, crystal-clear optics it brings you nose to nose with your next trophy. The efficient, compact, and weather-resistant design provides an unparalleled advantage that's easy to carry.

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Why Get A Rifle Scope With A Range Finder Built-In?

!±8± Why Get A Rifle Scope With A Range Finder Built-In?

In the world of hunting range finders, rifle scope range finders are a relatively small and not inexpensive category. Similar to range finder binoculars, range finder rifle scopes are about combining two necessary pieces of sport optics so that you only need to carry one.

Not every hunter needs one of these

Admittedly, this isn't for the hunter who needs a range finder for multiple uses like bow hunting. The one exception may be crossbow hunting, where you can mount a rifle-style scope and may not want to take your eyes off the target or move around too much. Of course, you really don't want to be waving around your rifle just to find the distance to the pin on the golf course. While you certainly can use it for shotgun slug hunting or rifle hunting when the typical shot is relatively close in, it strikes me as a bit of overkill. But if you want to have one for that, by all means go for it!

But if you're hunting over longer ranges, such as prairie dogs or antelope in the open areas out west or anywhere else where a scope will be necessary anyway, then you may want to consider a built-in unit. While the initial price tag is a bit of a shock, remember that this unit will replace two things. A quality scope by itself isn't cheap; when you add in the cost of a similarly high-quality range finder, the combination isn't quite as bad.

A choice of convenience vs. versatility and cost

Clearly, the convenience of not having to carry yet another gadget that can get lost has its advantages. And when you're lined up on that bull elk coming over the ridge, do you really want to take your eyes and hands off to fumble into your coat pocket for your rangefinder?

The tradeoff to that convenience is versatility and cost. Obviously, your rangefinder can only go and work with your rifle, unless you plan on detaching your scope. This is a specialty item for a specialty purpose.

But if you fit the profile, it can be a great product. Most models have wireless or other remote triggers so that you can range without taking your eyes off the scope. Most also have bullet-drop compensation technology (for example, the Burris Eliminator has nearly 600 factory pre-loaded cartridge specs to deliver automatic bullet-drop compensation numbers).

Oh, and one more thing - a BIG thing

Be sure to check your State, County and City laws for restrictions before ordering this product. Also, generally these cannot be exported out of the United States without prior approval of the US Department of State or Commerce.


Why Get A Rifle Scope With A Range Finder Built-In?

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