FYI, Midway got in a pretty big shipment of Open Boxed Sig Rangefinders. They define these as having been opened to take pictures, do training, or take measurements. I'm not sure why, but they have over 50 of each variety so they must have come directly from Sig. The 2200 BDX is down to $400 from $500 and the 2400 bdx is $620 down from $800 along with 2 blemished ones at $575.
I was originally going to get the 2200 bdx, but picked up the discounted 2400 BDX for the ability to sync with a Kestrel. From the original release, it sounded like it would only sync with the Kestrel Elite ($700), but on Kestrels website they specifically say it will work with the standard Ballistic 5700 ($400).
I did quite a bit of research and the beauty of the sig is the Applied Ballistics Ultralight along with the app interface. You can input temp, barometric pressure, and wind speed and direction with the app to give you a shooting solution out to 800 yards. I looked pretty hard at the new Leica 2800.com which has all the atmospheric measurements built in, but the downside is that there is no way to input wind through the app. So if you want wind measurements with the 2800.com, you have to use a Kestrel Elite anyways. With the Sig rangefinder it is a manual process, but you can put in the data through the app if you are using a chepar kestrel to collect wind, temp, and barometric pressure. Or if you have the Kestrel and a 2400 bdx, then you can just use the kestrel for all the measurements and shooting solution.
I was originally going to get the 2200 bdx, but picked up the discounted 2400 BDX for the ability to sync with a Kestrel. From the original release, it sounded like it would only sync with the Kestrel Elite ($700), but on Kestrels website they specifically say it will work with the standard Ballistic 5700 ($400).
I did quite a bit of research and the beauty of the sig is the Applied Ballistics Ultralight along with the app interface. You can input temp, barometric pressure, and wind speed and direction with the app to give you a shooting solution out to 800 yards. I looked pretty hard at the new Leica 2800.com which has all the atmospheric measurements built in, but the downside is that there is no way to input wind through the app. So if you want wind measurements with the 2800.com, you have to use a Kestrel Elite anyways. With the Sig rangefinder it is a manual process, but you can put in the data through the app if you are using a chepar kestrel to collect wind, temp, and barometric pressure. Or if you have the Kestrel and a 2400 bdx, then you can just use the kestrel for all the measurements and shooting solution.