I shot a chrono the other day with my buddy and I absolutely loved it. Cant remember the name but it was the size of a tablet with a circle on top for aiming to target. No wires, no taking off your can, the simplest chrono on planet earth and it was just awesome. Just sit beside gun and point to target and it reads the data.
Well my friend said buy the Garmin its just as good and much smaller and cost less. His was a grand. The Garmin is $600.
I have the more expensive Andi-Scan that preceded the Garmin unit by about a year and it works fantastic. Glad I found it before plopping down dollars on that huge lab radar crap which would have been just one more large thing to lug around with my gear.
The Garmin looks to be a similar form factor.
These are wonderful devices and labradar is obsolete just like that… Plop them on a small tripod or rail attach and you’re never without a chronograph. This one literally fits in your front pocket.
I’ve never missed a shot with this one.
With the Garmin at a cheaper price point and available in the US, you’re going to see a lot of those labradars up for sale real cheap, real soon.
Small enough to mount to the rifle if you want to. Area 419 is making an ARCA rail mount, and some other company is making a pic rail clamp you could mount to a diving board scope ring cap.
Garmin has a bluetooth app for that already. It’s called Shotview, free and works as advertised. It threw me at first because it doesn’t transfer data until after you end the session. I’m happy with the setup. just stick kinda pointed down range and it works. aiming isn’t critical.
Papa, you’ll be happy with it.
Data fields are MIN/MAX, ES, STD DEV, each shot high/low from Delta AVG. If you put in the bullet weight, it’ll do KE and power factor for you.
Anyone looking for a lightly used MagnetoSpeed V3?
So, what’s the scoop on those things guys? I’m sure they work but are there any irregularities or early issues? I have looked at them from the start so I’m just wondering. I have a couple of old-school Cronos and they work fine, it’s just the setup that’s a pain, which only takes 10min or less. Thanks for any info.
I’ve used Oehlers, CEDs, LabRadar, and now the Garmin. I can’t speak to accuracy because I have no way to calibrate the unit but the readings are within 7-10 fps of the LabRadar and generally the same difference on each shot. It may be due to where each unit starts reading the bullet velocity. It’s very small and easy to set up in seconds. It’s also very easy to use. It’s incredibly reliable in picking up each shot and not particular about being precisely pointed. It also picks up everything I’ve tried so far which is high velocity rifle, handgun, and 22lr. I’m especially happy that it works well with suppressed guns. I had an aftermarket trigger for the LadRadar that worked with suppressed guns but it was a little wonky. I almost always shoot at home so I don’t know how well it works at ranges with multiple shooters. So far this is one of those rare pieces of gear that seems too good to be true but really is that good.
Thanks, guys, for the info. I have been looking at these and they seem pretty cool and much easier than my old-school standard cronos. Not a big deal but I wonder if they would work inside? I have a Caldwell with LED attachments that I use @ our indoor range this time of year for handgun stuff. Not critical warm weather is only 3 months away in my area, LOL Seems like more places are getting them in stock, just looking for the best deal. Thanks again.
I used mine at an indoor 25 yard range a couple days ago. I was against the left wall, there was one empty lane on my right, and a shooter in the 2nd lane over. All my shots were recorded, and no extras.
I’m sure I’ll end up placed between two occupied lanes soon enough.