I've been working on getting one of the latest/greatest rangefinding binos for a few months and i thought it may be helpful for some if i share my opinions on the big 3 here. I don't have any experience with the Bushnell, Sig, Vortex, or any others. A lot of this will be splitting hairs, but I'll give you my opinion on how i'm splitting them.
Swarovski El Range
I'm a big time Swaro fan boy and I've had the El Range since they were released in 2012 or whenever that was. I have loved them, with a few major complaints. I had hoped that swaro would address these complaints with the refresh they did a few years ago, but nope, no luck.
My first and biggest complaint is that Swaro doesn't use their best glass and coatings in their rangefinder. I have and had other swaro binos with the swarovision, and they were noticeably better than the El Range optics. I had 10x swarovision binos i sold for something else along the way and i really missed those. I still have 8x Els with the swarovision, and i love those things to death. When i'm using the El Range i miss the perfect edge to edge picture. That's not to say that the El Range is bad, because it's not - it's still top shelf. But when you get used to amazing, anything less is a disappointment. I'm sure the Pure series will push that even further.
A few other quibbles i have with the El Range - the button location. I'm an archer so i hate reaching over the bino to hit the button that's on the left side. It's manageable, but not ideal. I also don't like that the minimum range is 33 yards. That sucks. Again - i was hoping swaro would address these issues with the latest iteration, but they did not.
Finally, the Zeiss and Leica offerings have integrated ballistics calculators. Swaro does not. It does include angle compensation, but that's about it.
I'm sure swaro is working on something amazing, but i'm sick of waiting. They are quite a bit behind the others right now optically and technologically.
Leica Geovid 3200.com
I currently have these at my house. I've been playing with them for the last 6 weeks or so trying to decide if i want to keep them. On paper they look amazing. I have a couple of concerns with them as well, however.
Can we talk about the name - 3200.com? That is the stupidest name for a rangefinder i've ever seen. I'd expect that out of a cheap chinese brand, but not Leica. One thing I don't like with the Geovid series is how often they are updating and changing the bino. That sucks for resale and it's tough to keep track of. Guys that bought geovids 2 years ago are already 3 or 4 binos back on the latest and greatest. Chill, Leica! While I appreciate the push to advance, I think refreshing the geovid every 3 years or so would be better than what we've seen. The complete opposite of swarovski. 2200, 2500,. 2200 B, 2600R , 28000, blah blah blah. Too much.
The optics are inarguably top notch. They are better than the El Range. I haven't been able to take them out at night or do any serious testing, but I'm very pleased with the optics in the Geovid. Because they use a laser that is situated in the center of the bino hinge, they can use their standard highest coatings on the bino, and it shows. Great optics.
The last few sets before the .com (again, what a horrible name) allowed users to update ballistic tables with a mini sd card. That has now switched to bluetooth. You use the Leica app on your phone and upload that data for your rifles to your bino. Your bino then does all the math and calculations and spits out what you need.
Zeiss did this with their Victory RF in 2018, so Leica clearly felt like it needed to catch up. It really looks as if they pushed this thing out the door without working out a lot of the bugs. The phone app is clunky and not intuitive. The menu in the bino itself is very buggy and hard to navigate. In fact, to find the instructions, i had to dig through downloads on the Leica website. Without that, i wouldn't have known how to do it. Even with the GUI app on the phone, it is clunky and doesn't work half the time. I may have a faulty pair, but my binos get "stuck" half the time i try to change anything in the menu. The red rangefinding reticle sits and spins and thinks....indefinitely. The only way for me to stop it is to take out the battery and reset it.
I have a call in with Leica support, so hopefully they have some kind of fix for me. As it stands now, I wouldn't take them hunting. If i needed a critical range, i couldn't trust them.
When the rangefinder does work, it's fast and simple. Very straightforward. It ranges down to very close and the button is in a great location, unlike the swaro.
Another small complaint i have with the geovid is that there isn't a great way to mount a stud to put them on a tripod. The laser sits in the middle on the hinge, so you'll have to use the platform strap thing if you want to tripod mount them.
Zeiss Victory RF
I haven't owned these (yet), but i think that's about to change. I've spend quite a bit of time with them at cabela's and i've used their software you can download that updates the binos.
These Victory RFs are freaking expensive (and i know it's all relative when talking about these things, because they are all expensive, but these are considerably more than the others). The 10x42s are like $6-700 more street price than the Leica. They come in around 3300 -3400 after haggling. Zeiss was running a promo last year where you got a free set of their Terra binos if you bought the RF, and those are worth about $500 or so, so that made it closer financially, but right now they are way more expensive.
Optics, like the Leica, are Zeiss's top of the line stuff. It appears that they offer the same glass and coatings used in their best Victory binos. They looked amazing at the store, but i haven't seen them in the field yet. I trust guys that say they are terrific in low light. I think their light transmission is 92%, which is a percentage or 2 above the others, and quite a bit better than the glass in the outdated El Range.
I don't love the look and the armor on the Zeiss. It just feels cheaper than the swaro and the Leica. That's a personal thing, though.
The size and weight are terrific. They do not look or feel like rangefinding binos. The buttons are easily reachable and you can swap what button you want doing what function for right or left handers. The Zeiss also ranges very close.
The rangefinder is fast and accurate. The software that comes with the app and binos is way, waaaaay better than what Leica has. Super easy to use and very intuitive. You don't really need instructions, unlike Leica, where i felt i needed to study it all. Way more thought and development went into the zeiss interface, and it shows.
The rangefinder max range is quite a bit less than the Leica - something like 2500 vs 3200 - but that makes no difference to me, and my furthest shots will be a heck of a lot shorter than either of them can zap.
Outdoorsmans makes a bino stud for the Victory that is great and easy to install, making the zeiss the most tripod friendly of this trio.
It should also be mentioned that the Zeiss makes a 10x54 RF that looks amazing...but it's several oz heavier and quite a bit longer and a few hundy more expensive. I'm sure the view of of them is amazing, however. I'm still considering these as well.
Right now I'm not sure if I'm going to end up with the Leica or Zeiss. It depends how good the support i get from Leica is and also if perhaps Zeiss can toss me a set of their promo binos.
Here's how i rank them, cost not considered:
1. Zeiss
2. Leica
3. Swaro
Cost factored in, it goes
1. Leica
2. Zeiss
3. Swaro
Let me know if you have any questions i can answer.
Swarovski El Range
I'm a big time Swaro fan boy and I've had the El Range since they were released in 2012 or whenever that was. I have loved them, with a few major complaints. I had hoped that swaro would address these complaints with the refresh they did a few years ago, but nope, no luck.
My first and biggest complaint is that Swaro doesn't use their best glass and coatings in their rangefinder. I have and had other swaro binos with the swarovision, and they were noticeably better than the El Range optics. I had 10x swarovision binos i sold for something else along the way and i really missed those. I still have 8x Els with the swarovision, and i love those things to death. When i'm using the El Range i miss the perfect edge to edge picture. That's not to say that the El Range is bad, because it's not - it's still top shelf. But when you get used to amazing, anything less is a disappointment. I'm sure the Pure series will push that even further.
A few other quibbles i have with the El Range - the button location. I'm an archer so i hate reaching over the bino to hit the button that's on the left side. It's manageable, but not ideal. I also don't like that the minimum range is 33 yards. That sucks. Again - i was hoping swaro would address these issues with the latest iteration, but they did not.
Finally, the Zeiss and Leica offerings have integrated ballistics calculators. Swaro does not. It does include angle compensation, but that's about it.
I'm sure swaro is working on something amazing, but i'm sick of waiting. They are quite a bit behind the others right now optically and technologically.
Leica Geovid 3200.com
I currently have these at my house. I've been playing with them for the last 6 weeks or so trying to decide if i want to keep them. On paper they look amazing. I have a couple of concerns with them as well, however.
Can we talk about the name - 3200.com? That is the stupidest name for a rangefinder i've ever seen. I'd expect that out of a cheap chinese brand, but not Leica. One thing I don't like with the Geovid series is how often they are updating and changing the bino. That sucks for resale and it's tough to keep track of. Guys that bought geovids 2 years ago are already 3 or 4 binos back on the latest and greatest. Chill, Leica! While I appreciate the push to advance, I think refreshing the geovid every 3 years or so would be better than what we've seen. The complete opposite of swarovski. 2200, 2500,. 2200 B, 2600R , 28000, blah blah blah. Too much.
The optics are inarguably top notch. They are better than the El Range. I haven't been able to take them out at night or do any serious testing, but I'm very pleased with the optics in the Geovid. Because they use a laser that is situated in the center of the bino hinge, they can use their standard highest coatings on the bino, and it shows. Great optics.
The last few sets before the .com (again, what a horrible name) allowed users to update ballistic tables with a mini sd card. That has now switched to bluetooth. You use the Leica app on your phone and upload that data for your rifles to your bino. Your bino then does all the math and calculations and spits out what you need.
Zeiss did this with their Victory RF in 2018, so Leica clearly felt like it needed to catch up. It really looks as if they pushed this thing out the door without working out a lot of the bugs. The phone app is clunky and not intuitive. The menu in the bino itself is very buggy and hard to navigate. In fact, to find the instructions, i had to dig through downloads on the Leica website. Without that, i wouldn't have known how to do it. Even with the GUI app on the phone, it is clunky and doesn't work half the time. I may have a faulty pair, but my binos get "stuck" half the time i try to change anything in the menu. The red rangefinding reticle sits and spins and thinks....indefinitely. The only way for me to stop it is to take out the battery and reset it.
I have a call in with Leica support, so hopefully they have some kind of fix for me. As it stands now, I wouldn't take them hunting. If i needed a critical range, i couldn't trust them.
When the rangefinder does work, it's fast and simple. Very straightforward. It ranges down to very close and the button is in a great location, unlike the swaro.
Another small complaint i have with the geovid is that there isn't a great way to mount a stud to put them on a tripod. The laser sits in the middle on the hinge, so you'll have to use the platform strap thing if you want to tripod mount them.
Zeiss Victory RF
I haven't owned these (yet), but i think that's about to change. I've spend quite a bit of time with them at cabela's and i've used their software you can download that updates the binos.
These Victory RFs are freaking expensive (and i know it's all relative when talking about these things, because they are all expensive, but these are considerably more than the others). The 10x42s are like $6-700 more street price than the Leica. They come in around 3300 -3400 after haggling. Zeiss was running a promo last year where you got a free set of their Terra binos if you bought the RF, and those are worth about $500 or so, so that made it closer financially, but right now they are way more expensive.
Optics, like the Leica, are Zeiss's top of the line stuff. It appears that they offer the same glass and coatings used in their best Victory binos. They looked amazing at the store, but i haven't seen them in the field yet. I trust guys that say they are terrific in low light. I think their light transmission is 92%, which is a percentage or 2 above the others, and quite a bit better than the glass in the outdated El Range.
I don't love the look and the armor on the Zeiss. It just feels cheaper than the swaro and the Leica. That's a personal thing, though.
The size and weight are terrific. They do not look or feel like rangefinding binos. The buttons are easily reachable and you can swap what button you want doing what function for right or left handers. The Zeiss also ranges very close.
The rangefinder is fast and accurate. The software that comes with the app and binos is way, waaaaay better than what Leica has. Super easy to use and very intuitive. You don't really need instructions, unlike Leica, where i felt i needed to study it all. Way more thought and development went into the zeiss interface, and it shows.
The rangefinder max range is quite a bit less than the Leica - something like 2500 vs 3200 - but that makes no difference to me, and my furthest shots will be a heck of a lot shorter than either of them can zap.
Outdoorsmans makes a bino stud for the Victory that is great and easy to install, making the zeiss the most tripod friendly of this trio.
It should also be mentioned that the Zeiss makes a 10x54 RF that looks amazing...but it's several oz heavier and quite a bit longer and a few hundy more expensive. I'm sure the view of of them is amazing, however. I'm still considering these as well.
Right now I'm not sure if I'm going to end up with the Leica or Zeiss. It depends how good the support i get from Leica is and also if perhaps Zeiss can toss me a set of their promo binos.
Here's how i rank them, cost not considered:
1. Zeiss
2. Leica
3. Swaro
Cost factored in, it goes
1. Leica
2. Zeiss
3. Swaro
Let me know if you have any questions i can answer.
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