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Join the contestHey Rob just curious because you are sponsored by Vortex are you allowed to use any other brand in competition if you wanted to? Or are you contractually obligated to use Vortex only?I started using mine to spot at matches and they work great out to 1000 yards to clearly see hits on steel. I was actually pretty impressed with the glass especially when mounted on a tripod. Could say something about a comparison with a well known set of binos looking down the same lane of targets but I know it would make the world blow up so I will not bring it up. LOL
Hey Rob just curious because you are sponsored by Vortex are you allowed to use any other brand in competition if you wanted to? Or are you contractually obligated to use Vortex only?
I am massively nearsighted (-10.5) and am very sensitive to eye relief issues, but yet I have no problem with the 5000. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ As ever YMMV.I'd buy a pair today if the Eye Relief was 18mm+. I have no use for bino's that require you to remove your glasses to have a full field of view and 16mm's is not corrected vision friendly, no matter how many manufacturers try to tell you it is.
I've been in the market for range finding binos and from what I've seen the Vortex Fury 5000s seem to be the best bang for the buck especially with the warranty. The thing that gives me pause is that I don't see hardly any objective reviews (non-sponsored) or even talk about them. Am I missing something? Other than they don't link to kestrels whats the downside to these lrf binos?
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There are several optics companies that have taken care of me when their products have failed. Customer service is wonderful.
But I'd really rather not have problems.
And most don't with Vortex but when they do they are treated well. That can not be said for every company and a lot of companies have upped they customer service due to Vortex.
The biggest problem I see with having your range finder attached to your binoculars is that at some point the range finder is going to shit itself.
I have a $1000 pair of binoculars, and a $500 rangefinder. If I had bought a LRF Bino, and the range finder shit itself I would have an expensive pair of heavy binos and still have to pack a LRF.
I caught hell in Germany as everyone in our group had a dual system except me. I can see the merit in speed, but never found wanting in how quick it was to shoot something with a LRF that I keep in the same chest rig as the binos.
If you have a static target that is easy to “find/re-find” three times (binos, LRF, then scope) then yeah, no big deal. Especially if you have a relaxed or non-existent time constraint.The biggest problem I see with having your range finder attached to your binoculars is that at some point the range finder is going to shit itself.
I have a $1000 pair of binoculars, and a $500 rangefinder. If I had bought a LRF Bino, and the range finder shit itself I would have an expensive pair of heavy binos and still have to pack a LRF.
I caught hell in Germany as everyone in our group had a dual system except me. I can see the merit in speed, but never found wanting in how quick it was to shoot something with a LRF that I keep in the same chest rig as the binos.
My dad still has his Leica LRF from the 90’s, and it works exactly the same as it did 20+ years ago.The biggest problem I see with having your range finder attached to your binoculars is that at some point the range finder is going to shit itself.
I have a $1000 pair of binoculars, and a $500 rangefinder. If I had bought a LRF Bino, and the range finder shit itself I would have an expensive pair of heavy binos and still have to pack a LRF.
I caught hell in Germany as everyone in our group had a dual system except me. I can see the merit in speed, but never found wanting in how quick it was to shoot something with a LRF that I keep in the same chest rig as the binos.
My dad still has his Leica LRF from the 90’s, and it works exactly the same as it did 20+ years ago.
If the lifecycle of these lrf bino’s is anywhere near the 20 year mark, it’ll be completely worth it to me. Everything breaks, and I’m fine with buying lrf binos a couple times in my life for the added functionality.
Leica probably won’t cover my 2200’s when they shit the bed in 15-20 years (hopefully that long), but I’d bet vortex would cover their Fury’s.
A few years ago I ranged a couple of nice bulls 1400 plus with my PLRF15 in heavy snow. With my 12x50’s I could tell the were 320-330 class bulls. The guy with me had a leica 1600 and he got the typical 30 yard snow reading. The only rf’s i have found that will reliably range through snow/fog/rain are higher end Vectronix units. Set the gate and enjoy the 3D functionality. I know you are out $$ if they go down but I have owned the PLRF05/10/15’s and never had a problem personally.I haven't found a LRF yet that works in heavy snow. It disrupts the laser too much.
Not really. They went beyond Leupold.
Leupold wrote the book on customer service?!Vortex hasn't had an original idea in, like, ever. If you can name one? I'm not a huge Leupold fan nowadays, but they wrote the book on customer service. Swarovski listened and learned from Leupold in that respect as well, and they are the class of the alpha's.
Vortex hasn't had an original idea in, like, ever. If you can name one? I'm not a huge Leupold fan nowadays, but they wrote the book on customer service. Swarovski listened and learned from Leupold in that respect as well, and they are the class of the alpha's.
.Who did Vortex steak their no questions asked warranty from?
Before them, I am unaware of any optics manufacturer that covered literally everything.
If you can’t name the optic manufacturer they took the idea from, well, then I just named an original idea.
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Learn how to read. I said Leupold wrote the book on CUSTOMER SERVICE, which is different than a specific warranty practice.
Vortex hasn't had an original idea in, like, ever. If you can name one? I'm not a huge Leupold fan nowadays, but they wrote the book on customer service. Swarovski listened and learned from Leupold in that respect as well, and they are the class of the alpha's.
I don't know how customer service is an idea that you can steal. You either have it or you don't. What Vortex create a situation where they were known for their warranty . I prefer a product that is not a piece of shit in a box, I have had good products from Vortex and bad and they always made it right. I have had several people tell me that the only reason they bought Vortex was the warranty. Every time I hear that the Tommy Boy video loops about a piece of crap in a box plays in my brain.
Whether Leupold was first in customer service or not, Vortex kicked enough as in Customer Service that that other optics companies started giving a fuck about their customers. Because in the long run they knew that Vortex would gladly take their customers from them.
There are so many optics companies that have started in the last 10 years I don't even know where to count them. Nearly all of them have the same warranty as Vortex. Some of them product higher quality products, some rebrand the same crap that Vortex buys from China and the Philippines.
For the average dude, $3000 rifle scope is a lot of money and to most people $500 rifle scope is too. So having a bullet proof guarantee helps sell it.
I purchased a pair of lrf binos this year. Initially, I had my heart set on the Vortex but ultimately purchased the Sigs. When I called Vortex, they did confirm that the Fury binos are viper glass. The guy at Vortex couldn't find any info on the divergence angle of the beam. I was going to purchase the Vipers, but I was fortunate enough to be in a squad at an NRL match with guys who had each brand.I've been in the market for range finding binos and from what I've seen the Vortex Fury 5000s seem to be the best bang for the buck especially with the warranty. The thing that gives me pause is that I don't see hardly any objective reviews (non-sponsored) or even talk about them. Am I missing something? Other than they don't link to kestrels whats the downside to these lrf binos?
My Sig binos are holding strong and they have the same advertised warranty as Vortex.
I mentioned as much above, but I’m still curious about nearsightedness people having trouble with these binos. I have -10.5 vision and wear glasses. In my 50 years, I’ve met one person with eyes worse than mine. I don’t have eye relief probs with my Fury 5000s.There is a new Razor 3-15x50 that is made in Japan. I'd like to handle one. Cheaper than a Nightforce or Leupold VX and should be similar quality.
As for the Fury and warranty, I'd agree that a lot of the risk with the LRF binoculars is gone when buying Vortex. I just wish the eye relief was 20 instead of 16. They are unusable to me with my four eyed freak near sightedness problem.
That is interesting. When I purchased mine, that was not what they had on the advertisements. Good catch though as this certainly would change my analysis too.Not according to the Sig site that says it's only 5 years on electronics and no mention of accidental damage.
INFINITE GUARANTEE™
SIG SAUER Electro-Optics are guaranteed forever. It’s an unlimited lifetime guarantee.
Unlimited Lifetime Guarantee
- Fully Transferable
- No Warranty Card Required
- No Receipt Required
- No Time Limit Applies
- No Charge
5 YEAR WARRANTY
(Electronic Component Limited 5 Year Warranty) Covers any defects in materials and workmanship in the electronic and Tritium components of illuminated riflescopes/sights, pistol sights, electronic sights, flashlights, lasers, binoculars, spotting scopes and rangefinders for five years from date of manufacture.
I mentioned as much above, but I’m still curious about nearsightedness people having trouble with these binos. I have -10.5 vision and wear glasses. In my 50 years, I’ve met one person with eyes worse than mine. I don’t have eye relief probs with my Fury 5000s.
I’m certainly not discounting your problems, as all eyes are different. Could you describe your problem a little more? Are you wearing glasses when using binos? Are they high-index (thinnest possible)? How are you setting the diopters? How are you setting the eye cup distance? Are you able to get the binos close enough together? Are your glasses as close as possible to your eye? Is the complaint that you want the same FOV with/without glasses? Etc.
For example, nearsighted lenses make one’s eyes appear smaller to another person (think: looking through a telescope the wrong way). So, to an onlooker, my eyes look closer together when I have my glasses on.
What this means, practically, is that I usually have to crank binos closed as far as they can go (like a little kid would do). Sometimes they don’t go close enough together and I get those little black crescents.
Anyway, perhaps I can help.
So, with the eye cups, do you screw those all the way in? Because with Fury HD 5000 binos, I found that I had to screw the eyecups out one notch (starting with them screwed all the way in). This is very counter-intuitive for an eyeglass wearer. Usually I get the best vision and FOV with, say, Steiner 8x32 eyecups folded over/flat.I am -5 vision or 20/400. You are much blinder (or whatever it is called), than I am. I have tremendous eye-relief problems with any binoculars that have less than 19mm of usable eye relief. Usable eye relief is measured from your eye ball to the eye cups (or the lens whatever is the closest). Most binoculars are listed by eye relief and not usable eye relief. I wear a 7 and 3/4's hat, so I have a larger sized head and my eyes are fairly far apart.
I get black circles in any pair of binoculars that have less than 19mm of usable eye relief.
I have 6 pairs of binoculars; Vortex Talon 10x42, Vortex Talon 8x42, Nikon 10x56 Monarch, Minox 8x56, Bushnell Legend 10x50, and Pentax porro prism 10x50's. I don't have any high end binoculars. You could argue that the Minox and Nikon's are mid range, but most of them are lower mid-range.