I want to talk about workflow.
A little bit of common language first. When engaging a target, a shooter has the perform the following actions:
1. Find the target
2. Determine the range to target
3. Calculate a firing solution
4. Input firing solution to rifle (dial/hold)
5. Fire, spot, reengage if necessary
For myself, a shooting problem looks like one of the following:
“Backyard plinking”: no time pressure, so all steps 1-5 can be completed at leisure.
“PRS”: there is intense time pressure however, steps 1-3 can be completed before the clock starts, only steps 4 and 5 are performed under time
What happens if you must perform all five steps under time pressure: field matches (SAC, Mammoth, RTC), hunting, or Mil/LEO?
What is the optimal equipment/process combination to most effectively, reliably complete this workflow under speed?
I don’t believe there is a perfect answer to this question with the tech that is out there today. Difficult tradeoffs have to be made, and I think we are all gunning for a second place solution.
Sure, you could find a highly capable equipment package that is best in class in its respective roles: Swaro Binos to find the target, Vectronix rangefinder to range, Kestrel to calculate a firing solution, bring up the rifle and shoot. Not including the rifle, now you have three devices with no integration. They excel in what they do, but as a total package solution it is severally lacking.
Likewise, you could attempt to find a single device solution: Leica Geovid HD-R 3000, Zeiss Victory RF, Wilcox RAPTAR S. However now you have to compromises on one or more features. For the binos, it is a poor onboard ballistic computer and, to make matters worse, no connectivity to a Kestrel Elite. For the RAPTAR, it is the obscene price tag and the fact that you are now reliant on a low resolution, low FOV, rifle scope, as opposed to binoculars, to find targets.
What would perfect look like? One device, great or best in class across all functions: glass quality, range finding performance, ballistic computation with onboard enviro sensors (no wind necessary) with solution easily relayed to shooter.
I think we are really close to this, but no one seems to hit it out of the park yet.
What have you guys found to be effective solutions in the meantime?
A little bit of common language first. When engaging a target, a shooter has the perform the following actions:
1. Find the target
2. Determine the range to target
3. Calculate a firing solution
4. Input firing solution to rifle (dial/hold)
5. Fire, spot, reengage if necessary
For myself, a shooting problem looks like one of the following:
“Backyard plinking”: no time pressure, so all steps 1-5 can be completed at leisure.
“PRS”: there is intense time pressure however, steps 1-3 can be completed before the clock starts, only steps 4 and 5 are performed under time
What happens if you must perform all five steps under time pressure: field matches (SAC, Mammoth, RTC), hunting, or Mil/LEO?
What is the optimal equipment/process combination to most effectively, reliably complete this workflow under speed?
I don’t believe there is a perfect answer to this question with the tech that is out there today. Difficult tradeoffs have to be made, and I think we are all gunning for a second place solution.
Sure, you could find a highly capable equipment package that is best in class in its respective roles: Swaro Binos to find the target, Vectronix rangefinder to range, Kestrel to calculate a firing solution, bring up the rifle and shoot. Not including the rifle, now you have three devices with no integration. They excel in what they do, but as a total package solution it is severally lacking.
Likewise, you could attempt to find a single device solution: Leica Geovid HD-R 3000, Zeiss Victory RF, Wilcox RAPTAR S. However now you have to compromises on one or more features. For the binos, it is a poor onboard ballistic computer and, to make matters worse, no connectivity to a Kestrel Elite. For the RAPTAR, it is the obscene price tag and the fact that you are now reliant on a low resolution, low FOV, rifle scope, as opposed to binoculars, to find targets.
What would perfect look like? One device, great or best in class across all functions: glass quality, range finding performance, ballistic computation with onboard enviro sensors (no wind necessary) with solution easily relayed to shooter.
I think we are really close to this, but no one seems to hit it out of the park yet.
What have you guys found to be effective solutions in the meantime?