I have a Leica 1600 and a Sig Kilo 2400. I also own a Kestrel 5700 Elite. I have tested the Sig quiet a few times out to 1600 yards, and the ballistic solutions are always within 0.1 MOA. I did have to play around with the speed a tad on the Sig app to get to this point (it does not have the full inputs of the AB app or the Kestrel). I also have the AB app from before I bought the Kestrel.
I have never used the Leica with built in firing solutions, but the optics on the Leica are better. I am happy with the Sig, but I wish it had Leica quality optics. If I had to put a number on it in low light, I would say that the Sig is 85% of the Leica’s optical ability. For archery in dark timber this could be a factor (although the Leica 1600 is useless for archery due to it not having angle compensation under 100 yards). I couldn’t imagine rifle hunting without a Kilo 2400 (or comparable ever again). I am 100% confident shooting out to 1000 yards in low to moderate wind and 750 and in is a chip shot. I use my Sig for both archery and rifle hunting. Just make sure if you do that, you change the modes before a hunt. The rangefinder cost me a great archery bull once when I left in in ‘rifle’ mode. The rangefinder said 60.0 yards but the slope corrected yardage was actually 53 yards. 7 yards will kill you with a bow.
The only downfall of all Sig rangefinders is cold soak. If your rangefinder is below 30 degrees for an extended period of time (even on your chest), it starts to struggle to range long targets (beyond 600 yards). This did cost me a cow elk a few years back when I was trying to fill my B tag. Sig claims that it’s the battery causing the issue, but I use the same battery in my Leica and don’t have problems in the same cold conditions. I have tried all Lithium batteries with the same result. Regardless of what Sig says, it’s the hardware and how it interacts with a cold battery. They suggest that you throw a hand warmer in your RF pouch or stick a chemical toe warmer to the side. This is what I have to do in November. Obviously this can affect your ballistic solution and it’s somewhat annoying, but I simply know that I need to hold a tad high on quick shots inside of 750 yards. Beyond 750 I am required to remove the heater pack and spin the rangefinder for about 30 seconds on the lanyard to acclimatize it to the environmental conditions. In reality you should be doing this no matter what, since that’s what you also do on a Kestrel.
At 1000 yards for my .300 RUM, a 15 to 75 degree swing changes the dope a full MOA or basically 10”. At 750 the variance is only about 3.5”. I’m not taking any quick shots on animals beyond 750 yards, so it’s no big deal for me.
Let me know if you have specific questions. I have had the Kilo and Leica since both were released.
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