I can sort of answer that…
I have zero time behind an xELR, but lots of time behind an LR and an MR. If you follow my logic (it’s logical to me anyway) I think you can extrapolate a little for the xELR. This will at least suffice until someone else answers.
1. I bought an LR and use it for everything. I can shoot consistent sub MOA groups with it (witnessed by members here).
2. I can see coyotes over 1000 yards away.
3. I can’t usually hit a coyote at that distance even during the day (real life factors… it’s simple to hit targets that size on a range).
Now, if you consider points 1, 2, and 3 above, you’ll realize that conditions and my shooting skill, and NOT the thermal, are the limiting factor in making actual hits at night.
I recently borrowed a MR from
@wigwamitus for a wolf hunt (what kind of dealer overnights you his personally owned thermal to borrow when you’re in a bind???). I expected to be range-limited by the MR. I wasn’t. I was, again, limited by real life real world factors, and NOT the image produced by the MR. I was also able to produce sub MOA groups with the MR.
So…
If an MR will do everything at night that I can realistically do in the day…
And if an LR can REALLY do everything at night that I can realistically do in the day…
Then the xELR doesn’t actually add any real world SHOOTING capabilities at all. If you choose an xELR, you will gain PID and aesthetically pleasing images, and there’s something to be said for that. But you will not be adding real world, rounds on target differences under any but the most uncommon circumstances.
BTW, I’ve found the perfect combo for wolf hunting in the west. MR or LR on an AR15 with a NOX35 as a scanner.