Had a Burris Eliminator III and sold it because the range-finding was "twitchy", and it wouldn't deliver a firing solution past 800-ish yards. Waited and watched for an Eliminator IV when I heard it had improved technology and ranged out to 2,000 yards. One popped at Sportsman's Warehouse and I grabbed it. Received it early this week, and used it for the first time this morning. Here's what I learned ... spoiler alert: It's pretty cool technology - way better than the E-III version.
First, the details of my test:
Used the Burris Ballistics App to get the drop and BC to program into the scope. It's easy programming the optic once you've done it once or twice, and having done the programming on a E-III ... I had no trouble at all.
Headed for the range and put splatter targets up at 100 yards. First shot was 1-inch low and 1-inch left. Four more rounds were 1/2-MOA from the first round. Made the turret adjustments and the next 5 shots were dead-center at sub-MOA. Our sight-in ranch as steel at 250, 300, 350, 400, and 500 yards. I pressed the ranging button, got the holdover dot, and put the next 5 rounds center-mass on the 500-yard steel. Declared victory and headed over to the "Gong Range" for some long distance work.
Hit every gong on the first shot from 300 through 1,200 yards. At 1,300 yards, I had my first miss just off the top-right of the 2'x2' steel plate. Leaned low-left edge and put 3 shots on the plate.
Here's where it got "interesting" ...
Moved up to 1,400 yards, ranged the steel target, and got (a) a solid range displayed in the scope at 1,402 yards, and (b) the signal that a firing solution could not be delivered (1 dot center and 3-dots at the bottom of the reticle. This confused me a bit, since I had plenty of space on the reticle below the location of the 1,300 yard firing solution by zooming out, but no matter what I did, I couldn't get a firing holdover solution beyond the 1,300 yard steel. I could range accurately past 1,300 yards out to the end of the targets, but couldn't get a holdover dot to save my ass. The manual says that indication in the reticle means I've "... reached the limits of the cartridge ...".
What I "did" do was "guestimate" below the 1,300 yard solution dot on the reticle, and it took me a couple of shots spotting my misses, to correct and get a good hit at 1,400 yards. I finished by putting 5-of-5 rounds on the steel at 1,300 yards, and declared "Victory" at that point.
My plan next week is to mount this on my Barrett MRAD with my .338-Lapua barrel, and see if a longer range round will compute out further than 1,300 yards. I'm hoping that playing with the ballistics (drop and BC) with longer-range rounds, might get me out further with a valid firing solution.
So let me summarize:
Pro's
This is amazingly cool technology, and unlike the "E-III" version ... Burris has dramatically improved the Eliminator IV technology to range significantly better and longer, and provide accurate holdovers out to 1,300 yards (and maybe further) when the best I could do with the earlier version was 800-ish.
For $1,600 bucks, this is worth it all day long ... twice on the weekend (IMHO) ... as long as you understand that you can "range" further than you can "compute".
I hope this review is useful to anyone thinking about buying one of these gadgets.
First, the details of my test:
- Mounted on my Masterpiece Arms 300-WMBA rifle
- Suppressed with a SilencerCo Chimera-300
- Ammunition: Hornady 300-WM 195gr ELD-Match
- Weather: Early morning - clear skies - 40-degrees - No wind
- Location: COSSA - Bend, OR
Used the Burris Ballistics App to get the drop and BC to program into the scope. It's easy programming the optic once you've done it once or twice, and having done the programming on a E-III ... I had no trouble at all.
Headed for the range and put splatter targets up at 100 yards. First shot was 1-inch low and 1-inch left. Four more rounds were 1/2-MOA from the first round. Made the turret adjustments and the next 5 shots were dead-center at sub-MOA. Our sight-in ranch as steel at 250, 300, 350, 400, and 500 yards. I pressed the ranging button, got the holdover dot, and put the next 5 rounds center-mass on the 500-yard steel. Declared victory and headed over to the "Gong Range" for some long distance work.
Hit every gong on the first shot from 300 through 1,200 yards. At 1,300 yards, I had my first miss just off the top-right of the 2'x2' steel plate. Leaned low-left edge and put 3 shots on the plate.
Here's where it got "interesting" ...
Moved up to 1,400 yards, ranged the steel target, and got (a) a solid range displayed in the scope at 1,402 yards, and (b) the signal that a firing solution could not be delivered (1 dot center and 3-dots at the bottom of the reticle. This confused me a bit, since I had plenty of space on the reticle below the location of the 1,300 yard firing solution by zooming out, but no matter what I did, I couldn't get a firing holdover solution beyond the 1,300 yard steel. I could range accurately past 1,300 yards out to the end of the targets, but couldn't get a holdover dot to save my ass. The manual says that indication in the reticle means I've "... reached the limits of the cartridge ...".
What I "did" do was "guestimate" below the 1,300 yard solution dot on the reticle, and it took me a couple of shots spotting my misses, to correct and get a good hit at 1,400 yards. I finished by putting 5-of-5 rounds on the steel at 1,300 yards, and declared "Victory" at that point.
My plan next week is to mount this on my Barrett MRAD with my .338-Lapua barrel, and see if a longer range round will compute out further than 1,300 yards. I'm hoping that playing with the ballistics (drop and BC) with longer-range rounds, might get me out further with a valid firing solution.
So let me summarize:
Pro's
- Uses AA batteries - very cool
- Easy to mount
- Easy to zero
- Glass is acceptable - not like a Leupold Mark-5 ... but clear and bright enough
- Once zero'd cap and ignore the turrets
- Online ballistics app is easy to use
- Scope is easy to setup for the ammunition I used
- Integrated range-finder is ... awesome ... and actually works way past the previous E-III limitation
- Firing solution holdover dot was spot-on out to 1,300 yards
- Wireless Bluetooth remote is very cool (push button to range)
- Parallax adjustment is on the Objective Bell - making it a difficult to adjust while looking through the scope
- Hit a 1,300 yard limit for a firing solution on a 300 Win Mag high BC bullet
This is amazingly cool technology, and unlike the "E-III" version ... Burris has dramatically improved the Eliminator IV technology to range significantly better and longer, and provide accurate holdovers out to 1,300 yards (and maybe further) when the best I could do with the earlier version was 800-ish.
For $1,600 bucks, this is worth it all day long ... twice on the weekend (IMHO) ... as long as you understand that you can "range" further than you can "compute".
I hope this review is useful to anyone thinking about buying one of these gadgets.