Chronograph choice

R they easy to set up, any reviews,

idiots at local indoor range have been since last friday to get me a price on a CED, gee whiz

just ordered a CED with case from mdgardner.com guy is in BC and has shot for 30 years, great prices and IN STOCK for about 325 shipped with carry case,(best value for under 400 as asked) and I will look at the PVM later this year as Peter always sells good stuff.

it is a shame not to spend money locally but when they are goofs, the internet is my friend,

Jeff
 
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PVM-21 is better than the Oehler 35, quicker to setup and has the largest "sweet spot" of any chronograph out there.
 
I have a question . So which make and model would be a persons best choice if there bugget is $400.00 or less
 
Found this:

We also did some serious fiddling with flash lights, mirrors aluminum foil, and a portable strobe light to try to get them to false trigger or give false readings,unsuccessfully on the PVM-21, but occasionally on both the CED and Oehler 35P). I think the range officer was calling the guys at Happy Acres to come and collect us but we assured him that we had a pass and were not escapees

There are reviews to be found with a little googling.

Regards,

Peter
 
Do any of the 'other' chronographs offer the proof channel where each bullet fired is measured through two chronographs and compared as the Oehler 35P does?
 
Looked it up and seems it is now called PVM-08 or PVM-2008?

Seems to be a spectacular piece of equipment, with a price to match. Wouldn't want to accidentely shoot that puppy.....
 
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I have the CED 2 with the IR option and I'm quite satisfied with it. The IR option makes all the difference. Only on 1 occasion did I fail to get a reading. It was in the winter with snow on the ground and the sun was at a low angle. I couldn't get a reading from my 223 rem using 60 gr bullets. However, even that day I got readings from my 308 with 155 gr bullets.

The following evaluation was conducted by the administrators on another board:

"We tested all the major brands except one.

1. Shooting Chrony -- Narrow sweet spot. Controls are confusing -- multiple pushes of same button required. Some units are very fussy as to light conditions. No IR option. Good Battery life.

2. PACT -- IR option doesn't work very well. Too many buttons on keypad. Thermo printer burns batteries quickly. We had to send one unit back. Having printer is nice, but overall, battery life is big issue.

3. Oehler 35P. Big, heavy with proof channel. Base unit very simple to use and very reliable. Sensors have proper lenses so the beam is focused, giving bigger sweet spot. Paper is very hard to feed when you run out. Battery life is pretty good considering it has a printer.

4. CED -- Small, light keypad. Nice big display. Keypad is pretty intuitive. Hinged sensor mounting bar is clever, compact when stored, but you have to be careful to slip the sensor bases on securely. IR option works good, IF you have the plugs seated tightly.

5. PVM-21 -- Once assembled (like a box kite), it is very fast, easy to set up. IR emitters work fantastic -- it will register lead pellets in complete darkness. AC adapter is funky. Unit works better with 12V battery but that has to be carried separately. Very reliable unit if you just use the white receiver box, but then you have to write down the results. Software is cranky to install and Not at all intuitive. Most guys using PVMs have given up on using with a lap-top. Unit desperately needs a better (less buggy and simpler) software interface, and it should be converted to run 5.5 volts so you could power from your laptop.

What would I buy? CED for entry level. Oehler if you have the money. PVM-21 if you shoot in low-light. PVM is excellent, but the computer interface is "not ready for prime time" and far too complex for most users. We had issues just installing the software on laptops -- you have to fiddle around to get the drivers to "take". If PVM would plug directly into USB port (like a printer) with clean software, it would be my choice for field assignments."
 
What would I buy? CED for entry level. Oehler if you have the money. PVM-21 if you shoot in low-light. PVM is excellent, but the computer interface is "not ready for prime time" and far too complex for most users. We had issues just installing the software on laptops -- you have to fiddle around to get the drivers to "take". If PVM would plug directly into USB port (like a printer) with clean software, it would be my choice for field assignments."

I saw that the PVM-08 has a USB port? Is is an updated model from what was tested (PVM-21) in the review? Seems their model numbers are a bit inconsistent.
 
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