It came from CRS, then passed to me in lieu of a payment.
I assume he meant he had to set up & zero his scope further fwd than normal, rather than just move it when using the NV
It came from CRS, then passed to me in lieu of a payment.
I assume he meant he had to set up & zero his scope further fwd than normal, rather than just move it when using the NV
I do not own one, nor looked through one.
I did have a long conversation with someone who has had one for several weeks now.
By all accounts its a very accomplished piece of kit with a compatible scope. Its an add on so has all the pros and cons these come with. Best with a scope whose side parallax is down to 30m, which is better than 10m/15m that some add ons demand. Its a handy spotter, and well made.
At the right price this would do, as is, for all rat and rabbit, so fine for .17HMR. For fox then it would need a good IR torch to boost the range to a tad over 200m practical. The picture it gives is sharp and clear. Loads to like about it.
If you already have a WFV700 or 800 then its not going to better them on pure absolute range. If you don't need all the range then its the one to get.
The DSA may not fit every scope but then the WDV's had the odd problem too. I think this unit is a tad longer than the WDV when fitted, but still usable without drastic changes.
For many this unit will be ideal.
Over the next few weeks I would expect a good few reviews, and with built in video then some good footage. I would like to see some pictures of how shooters fit behind it, and the rifle set up done.
All very promising.
Quote Angrybear wrote " For me the main drawback is that 3x base mag, you need a sidewheel scope which generally only come with 3x so the MINIMUM THROUGH THE UNIT IS 9X WHICH IS VERY MUCH REDUCED FOV."
Either iv'e mis understood what he is trying to say or this is misleading ?
I phoned Hussar and asked him about this as he has one, he said " if looking through the 2.5x17.5x56 S-TAC on its own you have a SLIGHTLY wider field of view, than you do when the Addonight is on with it and the Addonight is on its lowest magnification, he also said that this is so slight that you wouldn’t notice" ------the same goes for 3 or 4 mag scopes ----------what i'm saying is dont let this put you off.
At the moment i'm not in the market for another add on but this sounds to be the one to have, its also a very good hand held spotter as well.
Dave (warbucks)
Theoben Rapid MK1 177
AA S410 22
Bushnall Scout Range Finder
Hawk 3 x 9 x 40 m.a.p scopes
Deben mini pro lamping system
Its not misleading in the slightest & I've got proof from recording but I can't get it up here at the moment. Photos now up
looking at the same spot at approx 220yds (a section of heavy scrub) the 760 takes a photo of one bush at the end approx. 15-20 feet wide & 12 feet tall,
using the Ward 700 at the same target shows the whole clump of scrub some 20yds wide.
The difference between 20 feet & 20yds is rather more than SLIGHTLY wider
Sorry about the poor quality of the pics,
the screwdriver is pointing to the section shown in the 760 photo, both are at 4x on the scope, this shows the difference in both FOV & in the quality of the view I was using a B50 IR with BOTH units so that difference could not be blamed on the different IR.
https://ibb.co/eOh2MU
https://ibb.co/cD9tT9
Last edited by angrybear; 13-08-2018 at 01:49 PM.
After some fairly exhaustive testing I believe I have worked out that the mag range is actually 1.7x to 4.25x
& the digi mag is max 2.5x not 3.5x because it starts from 1 not from 0.
It certainly isn't anything like the 4x-28x mag range quoted in the specs, I've emailed CRS asking where the 4x-28x comes in to the equation,
I know that's from the manufacturer, but is rather misleading.
Anyway it's still a cracking good bit of kit, and highly recomended
Had an email reply from Ash at CRS, who says I'm pretty much spot on with the mag range.
Last edited by angrybear; 11-08-2018 at 06:24 PM.
Sorry, I just cannot get any decent pictures through the Ward to put up.
What to my eye is a perfect picture, is just a glare of IR blinding the recorder on the video recording.
In use they're so different that they don't really compare, the D700 has nothing but an on/off button, everything else is an extra.
While the 760 has everything built in, most of it adjustable in the menu.
With a B20 the ward has similar, but very slightly better, range but the biggest difference is depth & field of view which I found much better than the 760,
but as a self contained do everything rabbiting & short range foxing unit the 760 is excellent.
Photos through the 760 in daylight no set order as marked.
https://ibb.co/gufLtK
https://ibb.co/dP23fz
https://ibb.co/hdFg0z
https://ibb.co/b3er0z
https://ibb.co/izEDDK
https://ibb.co/fL7Tfz
https://ibb.co/iuHTfz
https://ibb.co/c0THY9
https://ibb.co/g8t9wU
https://ibb.co/hPGUwU
https://ibb.co/he89wU
And a couple of photos at night with the 760
https://ibb.co/fj5iO9
https://ibb.co/eQA039
https://ibb.co/bMfYO9
Last edited by angrybear; 17-08-2018 at 01:52 PM.
Also just realised the two tiny grub-screws by the red dot laser are to zero it, so it also gives you a laser target designator in daylight &/or at night with NV goggles.
Seems obvious now I've done it