Free: Contests & Raffles.
If you rifle hunt at all don't buy a archery rangefinder. Some limit you to distance that they can range.
Quote from: D-Rock425 on February 11, 2014, 11:11:02 AMIf you rifle hunt at all don't buy a archery rangefinder. Some limit you to distance that they can range.Ya that. I made that mistake buying the Leupold. States it will range out to 600. Ya right maybe if there was a reflective piece of foil used to range off of. I am lucky to get above 300 yds if there is a granite slab in the field. Mostly less than 225 yds. under normal field circumstances. Man it still pisses me off. I even sent it back to Leupold thinking something was wrong with it, nope nothing wrong with it.
I've had Nikon, Leica and Leupold, below is my experience with each:1. The Nikon Archers Choice was fine unless there was any rain or slight amount of fog, by far the most sensitive to adverse conditions.2. The Leica CRF1000 was the best I owned, it unfortunately got stolen when a slime bucket robbed my house and took my backpack. 3. I now own the Leupold RX1000, it works great, it's not as bright as my Leica but a couple hundred bucks cheaper. Jeff
Quote from: dscubame on February 11, 2014, 04:22:44 PMQuote from: D-Rock425 on February 11, 2014, 11:11:02 AMIf you rifle hunt at all don't buy a archery rangefinder. Some limit you to distance that they can range.Ya that. I made that mistake buying the Leupold. States it will range out to 600. Ya right maybe if there was a reflective piece of foil used to range off of. I am lucky to get above 300 yds if there is a granite slab in the field. Mostly less than 225 yds. under normal field circumstances. Man it still pisses me off. I even sent it back to Leupold thinking something was wrong with it, nope nothing wrong with it.Most all range finders are labeled as what they can read for distance on a reflective target. I have the 750 TBR. It ranges to 750 on reflective targets. Everything else is variable.