wildernessmaster
Lil-Rokslider
Just want to post this for everyone's sake... Not bashing any product or vendor in this mix, but I am pretty sure that most all suffer from this after talking to 2 major electro-optics vendors....
This past season 2019, I took my Sig Sauer Kilo Range Finder to Montana for my elk hunt. While I was out there Shedhorn had its great pre-season sale and I picked up a set of Vortex Fury's for a great deal.
During the run up to gun season, I was trying out my Vortex's scouting and kept getting what I thought were dead batteries. No range finding image in the glass, no ranging finding function working. At first, I thought it was bad batteries and changed them out. In the house in the warmth, they worked. Out in the field, in the cold it didn't. BTW, it was cold but not the typically Montana cold as a witches tit cold - more like 20 - 10 degrees.
So for gun season, I ditched the Vortex Fury's and used my old reliable Sig.
Opening week of gun season it dropped to the minuses for a period I was hunting. Specifically a few days before I killed my elk and the day I killed it, it was in the 10 - -17 degrees. During some stalking and when I went to took my shot, my Sig failed me. Its reading image would be very weak... and if it did work it was showing wonky ranges.
Fast forward to post season. I called both vendors to talk with them.
An aside, the customer service I got from Vortex was as I always find it spectacular. The customer service I got from Sig - really sucked balls. I mean really sucked balls. I won't get into it here but it was so bad I went on social media and put it out there.
Sig immediately went in the offensive-defensive mode and kept saying I put bad batteries in it. I told him the brands of the 3 different batteries I tried and all were brand new bought from 3 different locations. That shut him up about the batteries, but then he started saying that range finders lasers don't work well in the cold = au contraire my friend. Unfortunately for him, I am an electrical engineer... Lasers need cold. IGiven his statement I asked for the operating specifications of the device (which almost ANY manufacturer so share). It would have the operating temp ranges. He refused to share. In the end after going through this idiots spiels, I did get to a supervisor who finally told me they really didn't know but they think around 14 degrees they start failing.
Vortex while giving me less run around and better service (answering the phone and getting me to the right person) ended up essentially saying a similar thing.
Given lasers don't fair worse in the cold, given new batteries, etc and with my EE background, what I suspect is this.... When it is cold two things happen that end up in bad ju ju for the range finders:
1. The laser takes more energy to "energize" (its cold)
2. The batteries have lost some voltage/amperage due to the cold.
Given the compact format of these devices and the smaller batteries they use, those energy sources are just not enough in the cold to push the laser over the "energization" hump to fully function. In absence of a fully functioning laser you get wonky readings. More so you get massive battery drain so the screen in the finder looks weak as well.
Like I said at the start... thats two major vendors who opened the kimono... I suspect all suffer from this same issue.
Me personally I am adding range finding reticles to my scopes for a backup.
This past season 2019, I took my Sig Sauer Kilo Range Finder to Montana for my elk hunt. While I was out there Shedhorn had its great pre-season sale and I picked up a set of Vortex Fury's for a great deal.
During the run up to gun season, I was trying out my Vortex's scouting and kept getting what I thought were dead batteries. No range finding image in the glass, no ranging finding function working. At first, I thought it was bad batteries and changed them out. In the house in the warmth, they worked. Out in the field, in the cold it didn't. BTW, it was cold but not the typically Montana cold as a witches tit cold - more like 20 - 10 degrees.
So for gun season, I ditched the Vortex Fury's and used my old reliable Sig.
Opening week of gun season it dropped to the minuses for a period I was hunting. Specifically a few days before I killed my elk and the day I killed it, it was in the 10 - -17 degrees. During some stalking and when I went to took my shot, my Sig failed me. Its reading image would be very weak... and if it did work it was showing wonky ranges.
Fast forward to post season. I called both vendors to talk with them.
An aside, the customer service I got from Vortex was as I always find it spectacular. The customer service I got from Sig - really sucked balls. I mean really sucked balls. I won't get into it here but it was so bad I went on social media and put it out there.
Sig immediately went in the offensive-defensive mode and kept saying I put bad batteries in it. I told him the brands of the 3 different batteries I tried and all were brand new bought from 3 different locations. That shut him up about the batteries, but then he started saying that range finders lasers don't work well in the cold = au contraire my friend. Unfortunately for him, I am an electrical engineer... Lasers need cold. IGiven his statement I asked for the operating specifications of the device (which almost ANY manufacturer so share). It would have the operating temp ranges. He refused to share. In the end after going through this idiots spiels, I did get to a supervisor who finally told me they really didn't know but they think around 14 degrees they start failing.
Vortex while giving me less run around and better service (answering the phone and getting me to the right person) ended up essentially saying a similar thing.
Given lasers don't fair worse in the cold, given new batteries, etc and with my EE background, what I suspect is this.... When it is cold two things happen that end up in bad ju ju for the range finders:
1. The laser takes more energy to "energize" (its cold)
2. The batteries have lost some voltage/amperage due to the cold.
Given the compact format of these devices and the smaller batteries they use, those energy sources are just not enough in the cold to push the laser over the "energization" hump to fully function. In absence of a fully functioning laser you get wonky readings. More so you get massive battery drain so the screen in the finder looks weak as well.
Like I said at the start... thats two major vendors who opened the kimono... I suspect all suffer from this same issue.
Me personally I am adding range finding reticles to my scopes for a backup.