People complain about the weight and price of ranging bino's but there are many reasons I find that funny and I will explain why. #1 how many times are you scouting, hunting or anywhere and use your range finder when you see an animal? Almost never if you have both? How many times are you hunting and see a buck or bull and say ok, that hiss is 400 yards from the buck/bull and I am 1200 from that if I get there I have a 200 yard shot? My guess is never. I had/have ran split system meaning both binos and range finder for years. And thought it is/was fine until my buddy had a ranging set and I realized you under use a range finder when you have an individual range finder because convenience or inconvenience.
We were scouting for deer and I am like ok look at that buck he's kind of far and he's like no not bad 557 yards? I would be like oh there is does right of him just a ways hes like 610. I was like what are you talking about? He was calling yardages constantly and I realized why the hell I have a rangefinder and never use it like this?? Hmmm.. Got me thinking is it me and poor practice or is ranging binos the way to go?
Another scenario. I am w/ my daughter Oryx hunting and we stock up on 4 Oryx that turned into 27 in short time. I am ranging them with my Leica's and telling her which to shoot and the distance. Additionally, after she shot she needed to make a follow up shot which was a different yardage which I was able to call out and tell her where she hit and never put my bino's down.
I got to thinking later on... What if I had a decent rangefinder with good glass like a Leica how hard would it of been to find the exact Oryx, range it, put the range finder down, puck the bino's up watch the shot. Put the bino's down, than re range and hope it was the same one with all that going on. Would of been terrible IMO. Time is often money in the field and its hard to see what a person has in a supremely better scope/glass that a tiny range finder especially in a situation with 10 shooter Oryx and know your looking at the specific one they are through 18X.
I know every scenario is different but I will never not own a set of ranging bino's for a primary ever again after all I have seen how they work in real hunting practicality and how much you learn to use a plan on distance and start be conscious of what distance works for what stocks and shots.
I still have 12's and 15's but I truly believe having ranging bino's is impossible to beat for listed. But maybe its not for everyone but I will never go back to standard bino's.