Whats your experience with the LabRadar Doppler Chrono? How do you guys think it compares to a MagneetoSpeed chrono? Pros/cons? Thanks in advance.
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Thanks guys. My MagneetoSpeed crapped the bed and I've been seeing a lot of fellas running the LabRadar so I figured I would look into it. Thanks again for your input.
If you want to mess with it, it can be made to work well
If you just want to be able to shoot near others, suppressed, not finicky and eliminate a headache.
Get something else, not worth the $500 and all the Tylenol you'll need.
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My experience is totally opposite yours. A headache is setting up a traditional chrono, which will stop working at the drop of a hat, for no reason whatsoever. Then you have to wait for a line break to fix it, only to find that it still isnt working. Man i dont miss those things!
The day I got my labradar, I took it to the back yard and shot a bunch of pellets out of a beeman spring air rifle past it. Worked like a charm.
While there certainly room for improvement, this technology is the way to go in my opinion.
I've had mine over a year without any problems. It has fallen over one time in a 20 MPH wind and it still keeps on running perfect. Maybe its just me, but when you spend $500 on a chrono that is as sophisticated as labradar you should treat it with a little more care. I have over 1,000 rounds by mine, 22 LR to 300 Win mag suppressed. I had a few questions on the where to place the muzzle to get it trigger but after watching their YouTubes and talking to their tech support I never have a problem. This is without a doubt the best chrono i have ever had. Well worth the money, but learn to take care of your equipment and it will take care of you.
Lowlight said:You can drop proof electronics
I've had mine for several months. I can't speak to durability as mine has never fallen (I use the platter-like LabRadar base).Any updates from those of you who have had a LR for a while now?
Been considering one...
Ran LR at the same time as the MS. Were the same or 2fps different. On occasion 3 fps.
I run mine at a range, next to muzzle brakes, and I am shooting a suppressor. If you learn how to set it up and where to place the muzzle, it works great. For a suppressor, set it at most sensitive and put the muzzle even with the back of the LR. Microphone is on the left side, in the middle. I never fail to set it off now. Running a gun with a brake, I set sensitivity low and put the LR so it is in the muzzleblast back a foot or two depending on the size of the gun.
I have no fear of it falling over. I keep it in a hard plastic case, and when I use it, I have a screw to attach it to the case. Ain't no wind blowing it over. I keep my battery pack and cables in there.
LR just released the phone app, so we should see Bluetooth connectivity. Might be buggy at first.
I rarely use my MS anymore, and always set up the LR now. So easy.
The LR shows the "distance" downrange at which the projectile was "clocked", does it not? At what downrange distance are you getting a 2-3 fps "difference" from a MS? I'm asking because a radar or laser being used to check "velocity" has to hit the target object at least twice to get a "differential speed" from its position change between the two "hits". Its pulses of radar/laser energy have to come at set intervals and that frequency has to be wide enough that the outgoing energy pulses don't interfere with the incoming "echoes" from previous pulses. Even if a microphone "triggers" the device it still has to "hit" the target object at least twice to measure its speed. I can't picture a scenario where an LR is able to "clock" a projectile within the length of an MS and the distance between its "sensors". If an LR and MS are producing "identical" results one or the other or both must be "off".
The app is now available. Need to install new firmware v1.2.0
You can do that with the apple app.It will be nice when they let you adjust to FPS from MS, also changing projectile weights would be nice to do on the App when shooting different rifles on testing outings... They advertise being able to change settings.... Well - I say, not really in my experience with the app.
It will be nice when they let you adjust to FPS from MS, also changing projectile weights would be nice to do on the App when shooting different rifles on testing outings... They advertise being able to change settings.... Well - I say, not really in my experience with the app.
The LR shows the "distance" downrange at which the projectile was "clocked", does it not? At what downrange distance are you getting a 2-3 fps "difference" from a MS? I'm asking because a radar or laser being used to check "velocity" has to hit the target object at least twice to get a "differential speed" from its position change between the two "hits". Its pulses of radar/laser energy have to come at set intervals and that frequency has to be wide enough that the outgoing energy pulses don't interfere with the incoming "echoes" from previous pulses. Even if a microphone "triggers" the device it still has to "hit" the target object at least twice to measure its speed. I can't picture a scenario where an LR is able to "clock" a projectile within the length of an MS and the distance between its "sensors". If an LR and MS are producing "identical" results one or the other or both must be "off".
Is the trigger start/stopping the radar going out, or just that it is measuring? I thought it was already sending out radar waves and the trigger was just to tell it to look at the data, which could be stored in memory and referenced after the triggering is sensed. The radar isn't looking at set distances, it is just reporting at those distances- is how I interpreted what is going on.
Speed of light versus the speed of sound? I'm guessing the radar could be getting pings something like every mm of flight or so. It is continious wave doppler, so it isn't measuring the distances and computing, it is looking at doppler shift.
All instruments produce data which then has to be turned into information according to some calibration. If the two methods are calibrated correctly, they should agree with in some variance.
The biggest unknown about LAbRadar for me is exactly how they are tracking sound as T0. Position of the radar relative to the muzzle and variations in speed of sound, plus variation in time entering the radar field should affect the MV calculation. Hopefully these are accounted for but...?
Yes Doppler is giving "pure" velocity - via Doppler calculations - but the offset could be utilized 1) as a correction for the angle of the projectile through the radar field, and/or 2) reference for accoustic time delay (time for sound to reach radar).My first thought was that the 'offset' that you enter might be used to help it know- but that wouldn't be true for the use of the mic. The Doppler data is just giving speed, right? It doesn't really give distance directly? It can calculate change in distance when it get some speed and time measurements, but it doesn't know the actual distance, right? So you'd get the trigger event, it would start collecting speed data. So if you are getting some speed data and see some kind of change in speed over time, you fit that to a function that extrapolates back to T0 and a D0. If the trigger event falls with in some window, the system reads it as a valid data set.
That's a pretty good test. I didn't seem like they tested anything other than the .338 though. The larger bullet will have a very large surface area relatively. It's too bad they didn't test smaller calibers.https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.th...onal-weibel-doppler-radar-benchmark-test/amp/
Firearm Blog did a test with the Labradar and a commercial Doppler radar.
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/2018/06/chrono-camparison-test-labradar-magnetospeed-oehler-35p/
here's another article/test LR vs MS-V3 vs Oehler 35P
5) Believe your chronograph, it is probably the most accurate reloading tool that you own.
That is a good take away.
That is pretty good take away. It would be interesting to see how a 5.56/6mm bullet accuracy might be different for the smaller bullets with the Labradar. I wonder if you could aim the Labradar better, could you tighten up the beam and get better/further data from the unit?