northern skies
CGN frequent flyer
So I bought a Leupold RX-IV this summer, and it's not performing as it was advertised. I'm going to send it back and exchange it for an upgrade.The Swarovski laser guide looks like an excellent model, but the Leica CRF1600 coming out in a month looks great too. Here is what I gather so far about their differences.
-The Swarovski has superior optics. I intend to use either unit as a monocular, so this is a plus.
-They are both waterproof. The leica does not mention nitrogen fill, but the swarovski does. I wonder if that matters.
-They both use CR2 batteries. The swarovski lasts 1000 actuations, the leica lasts 2000.
-The leica ranges in 0.3 seconds, while the swarovski has to charge a capacitor and takes a 1 second delay. I wonder if this could make holding on a target difficult over the delay.
-The leica is wallet sized, the swarovski is about the same size as my RX-IV.
-The Swarovski probably has a longer range. If they both go past 1500m as adverised, they are both adequate.
-The leica has a two-year warranty. The swarovski has a lifetime warranty.
-I hear that the swarovski's reticle is huge and difficult to pinpoint a target with.
-Swarovski is available now, the leica is available mid september..... but I wonder if they are bs'ing me about when they can actually get it in my hands.
-The leica has some gadgets. I found that angle compensation did not prove to be useful in the leupold. It changed my reading by a meter or two. However, the density-compensating functions on the CRF1600 sound very interesting, although I wonder if it will actually tell me the temp/pressure insead of just blindly giving me a solution to some rough approximate trajectory like the leupold does..... I want it to "show its work" so I can plug the numbers into more accurate data.
-Leica is $850. Swarovski is $1100.
Your opinions please!
Thanks!
-The Swarovski has superior optics. I intend to use either unit as a monocular, so this is a plus.
-They are both waterproof. The leica does not mention nitrogen fill, but the swarovski does. I wonder if that matters.
-They both use CR2 batteries. The swarovski lasts 1000 actuations, the leica lasts 2000.
-The leica ranges in 0.3 seconds, while the swarovski has to charge a capacitor and takes a 1 second delay. I wonder if this could make holding on a target difficult over the delay.
-The leica is wallet sized, the swarovski is about the same size as my RX-IV.
-The Swarovski probably has a longer range. If they both go past 1500m as adverised, they are both adequate.
-The leica has a two-year warranty. The swarovski has a lifetime warranty.
-I hear that the swarovski's reticle is huge and difficult to pinpoint a target with.
-Swarovski is available now, the leica is available mid september..... but I wonder if they are bs'ing me about when they can actually get it in my hands.
-The leica has some gadgets. I found that angle compensation did not prove to be useful in the leupold. It changed my reading by a meter or two. However, the density-compensating functions on the CRF1600 sound very interesting, although I wonder if it will actually tell me the temp/pressure insead of just blindly giving me a solution to some rough approximate trajectory like the leupold does..... I want it to "show its work" so I can plug the numbers into more accurate data.
-Leica is $850. Swarovski is $1100.
Your opinions please!
Thanks!




















































