jlow said:My guess is range has little to do with how much power you can supply but regulatory limits.
I would also think that a chrono that requires a generator will have a significantly diminished buyer population – remember, a lot of us like the LabRadar because it is easier to setup, but having to bring your generator to the range would take that in the opposite direction in a huge way...… :![]()
This. I love my 35P, but I often don't take it to the range because of the hassle in setting it up. If this thing can sit on the edge of the bench and give me precise velocity out to 100 yards in hunting calibers, and I don't have to hassle with adding-machine paper, I'm sold. It's that simple. They appear to have revolutionized the end-user experience in chronographs, and you can bet they'll release firmware upgrades once they have sufficient user data back. I don't need to do long-range BC analysis; that's why I buy Brian's books.
For those of you who are disappointed, please cancel your pre-orders so that I can move up in the list.