I'm having them put one in with the shipment of the 1-8.5x scope for review in late July. I'll write something up on it but this isn't going to be a big rangefinder review with a bunch of products. I just figured that since they were sending the package anyway I might as well have a look at them. There is a plan, in the future, to allow for the input of custom ballistic information into the rangefinder. I really want to relegate ballistic tables and equations to the backup role by having this integrated with the rangefinder so for a product to really blow up my skirt it has to do this. Still, I thought that having a look at the unit and seeing how much range and reliability it has in practice would be worthwhile.
Next year I am planning on a big rangefinder round up. I'm betting that, given another year, more companies will follow Leica's lead with the Geovid range finding binoculars they released this year.
On a general note, with range finders, I think that we are not so much dealing with a buy once cry once product. The progression in these is more similar to the progression in electronics products than the progression in traditional optics. You may find that buying a $3,000 Leica today will only range as well as a $600 product in five years though it will still look like a $3,000 binocular. I agree that at some point we all have to take the plunge but I think a very important part of that decision will be choosing just how far we need to be able to range and how good we want the optic to look. I do not think that laser range finders will hold their value to the degree that traditional optics have. To that extent, I don't believe that working your way up the tree by buying and selling products as you get the money is going to be a good strategy. I think that careful consideration of exactly what you want the rangefinder to do and waiting until you have a product that can do everything you want is in order. For me that means it must have a full ballistic calculator that includes angle of inclination, range (reliably to at least 1,000), preferably pressure/altitude, and allows for custom ballistic information. All this must be in a binocular of the quality that it can serve for target location. I would also prefer an 8x32mm platform because it is smaller and steadier for long times behind the glass. In essence, it will take all of that to get me commit because I don't think that, 5 years down the road, I am going to be able to get 80% of the value I have in it back out. Its not buy once, cry once, so much as buy once because your stuck with it.