No, the processor that provides thermal observation capability is not the same as a GenII/GenIII intensifier tube that provides light-based image-intensification capability. You’re using completely different, though related, wavelengths of energy on the electromagnetic scale.
A thermal device detects differences in the amount of heat being emmitted by different objects, as compared to a background temperature. The processor provides a visual intepretation of that info to a screen. They’re not particularly vulnerable to exposure to sunlight, though it’s a good practice to turn off the device and put the lens cover on when not in use.
Image intensifiers take light photons, change them into electrons, multiply them by a factor of 10,000X or so, then turn them back into photons to be used to create an image. These ARE sensitive to light, and must be turned off and the lens covers applied to prevent tube burnout, ghost image imprint, or other types of damage.
Thermal works in all lighting conditions, though works better at night when the land is “cold” and all the stuff moving around shows “hot.” It’s all about the comparative temps within the device’s view. If everything within its view is the same or close to the same temp, you won’t see much detail. So, noon/early afternoon in the desert will require lots of gain/level/contrast/etc adjustments to see a reasonably clear image, but the same environment an hour prior to dawn will make mammals stand out like a turd in a punch-bowl.
Wet particulates will severely interfere with capability, so fog and oily smoke almost completely obscure a scene. Same with heavy enough snow or rain, though to a lesser degree.
Given the type, it’s gonna be somewhere on the same basic capability level of the first-flight PAS-13s; this is late 90s thermal technology, when the best possible imagery in that medium was only possible if one had a cooling unit that needed to be housed on an airframe or in a turret. This will similarly be a “cooled” thermal, though smaller in scale. When turned on, it’ll make a whirring sound; normal, means the the mechanism that takes it to and keeps it at its operating temp is working.
Cooled thermal = battery hog, worse in hot climates, and may use power source that’s not readily available…I simply can’t tell from the images I’m seeing if it uses the same rectangular comms-type batteries as a PAS-13 or PAS-21.
Yes, like anything, it can and will wear out, and need periodical calibrations. Are such services, and spares, available? No way to know except contacting the manufacturer.
Oh, and don’t clean the lens by licking it. Glass absorbs thermal energy too well to use it to make lenses, so thermal device lenses are made of germanium, which is toxic. Not “kill you” toxic, but “extraordinarily unhappy for a few hours” toxic.
Honestly, in the face of what’s currently available, I’d only call this type “good” in comparison to a total lack of thermal capability. That said, knowing that current devices start around $10k, I understand why something like this -19 might be appealing. I’d be leery about spending even a comparatively small amount on a thermal version of a Bic lighter; the question to ask if whether or not you’re really saving any dough on something that one might not be able to get serviced…?
Other side of that coin is, if it’s not being heavily used or batted about as it would when mounted to a crew-served weapon, it could last an incredibly long time if it’s in decent shape to begin with.