Right, I was one of the lucky ones who received one of these through the post last week. Having acquainted myself with the knobs and buttons on the unit, I mounted it on top of my Weihrauch .22 Hornet and set off up the farm to zero it. After just a couple of shots, the rifle was bang on and I was off to test the scopes' abilities in the daylight ( bright sunshine). Within 20 mins I'd taken a couple of bunnies with the new set-up; one at 68 yards, the other at 87 yards. Both were head shot and both were very easy to see through the scope, even though they were in a field full of knee high buttercups. The rabbits just look black against a snowy background. I then spent about 2 hours just looking at different objects (mainly horses and rabbits) and familiarizing myself with the unit. There are very few controls, thankfully! One dial which you use to switch the unit on and alter the brightness, one for the illuminated reticle and a button on the back of the onboard IR.
You adjust the focus on the cross hairs/ reticle just like on a normal scope. You can focus the unit using a large rubberised grip on the front-end of the unit. Pretty easy to set up.

Over the course of the next week, I was able to try the unit out on several occasions, taking rabbits out to around 100 yards and foxes out to 150 yards. The only limitations I can see would be down to the 5x magnification of the scope. If I had the unit on my .243 ( I intend to try it next week) I don't think there'd be a problem taking foxes out to 200 yards and beyond. The picture is very clear. Of course, the evenings are very light at the moment and although I was shooting until 10.30pm ish, I had no need to switch on the onboard IR. All it did when I tried it was light up the quarry's eyes beautifully!

To summarise: The unit is very easy to use, no screens atop the unit, no leads or wires to get snagged. The eye relief is spot on. The scope can be used in daylight and at night without any major dramas that I could see. I appreciate that it may not be for everybody but, for £400, it does what it says on the tin and I am more than happy with mine, so happy that I've ordered another one.