I found exactly the same....only i bought 2 x zulus and got rid of 008. Hung on to the 007 as back up...Hmmm.
Funny thing is I am a fan and still consider them to be good value - having bought and still using the Pard 007, 008P and more recently the Arkens Zulus I can speak from having some experience with each. They all work well but are very different - the 007 is very flexible (.22/.17hmr/.222/6.5x55 and .308) with no grounds for complaint if a good add-on IR is used. I love the 008P - as a dedicated 24hr set up (was on the .222 but now demoted to the .17hmr) I really rate it again especially with a good add-on IR. The Zulus is excellent (now on the .222) and you do not need an add-on IR unless you are out on a moor but the focus is sooooo fiddly - to the point of irritation.
They are all useful in their own way but technology advances at such a speed that another version is always just around the corner…
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A guy on the airgun forum just bought one on Amazon UK (from the PARD shop in China)
He paid £760 and it was delivered to with no extra charges exactly one week after he placed the order
The IR is a vcsel rather than an LED, so it will be interesting to see if Sportsman Gun sell them
Cheers
Bruce
Hopefully the Nightstalker 4k will be better at night as well.This is great to hear. My DS35 gen 1 is brilliant at night which is where I use it. Having a better day picture will be a bonus to say the least.
A bit of a segue Bruce but as per another comment or two - why does the Zulus require max brightness (6) setting or is there a way round this?Looking at the sensor spec, I think it will be the same sensor as used in the HIK Alpex 4k
They also claim to be using ED glass in the objective lens - which is something they really needed to do because their lens quality has traditionally been pretty poor compared to other brands
I suspect they will be very good in daylight, but their spec sheet does not quote an aperture for the objective lens which makes judging low light performance more difficult
Cheers
Bruce
Well that’s me and Smelly banjaxed then!You can't make the display brighter than level 6, but if you need level 6 all the time, I suggest you get your eyes tested
In bright sunlight - specially if the sun is behind you, you'd need the rubber eyecup and level 6 brightness but at night, with or without the rubber eyecup, most people have it set much lower to reduce glare on their face and strain on their eyes
Cheers
Bruce
Of course you had the relevant HMRC export paperwork for licensable goods in placeMe & a couple of pals were lucky enough to sell ours to a Ukranian guy that wanted to buy as many as possible. We got half decent money for them all before the Zulus arrived and the price plummeted. The Zulus really is a game changer.
They were sold in the UK.Of course you had the relevant HMRC export paperwork for licensable goods in placewhether you shipped it directly or knowingly sold it would go out of the U.K. doesn’t matter, it’s an offense, and a big one - lessons to be learned to a lot of eBay sellers as well!
In fairness the Pard008 are a great unit and a used one with LRF is a steal at £300 especially for anyone upgarding from the 007. It's small, light, discreet looking and a savage piece of technology for anyone even half interested in night or day shooting.Sales of PARD NV products dropped significantly when the Arken Zulus came on the scene
The situation was not helped because the Gen 2 DS35 came out with an LED IR rather than a laser IR which resulted in significantly poorer NV performance than the Gen 1 version
Sportsman Gun Centre are the importer and distributor for PARD products, but if you look at their website many products are out of stock and the supposed delivery dates tend to be continually extended
If you try to sell your NV008s, then IMHO, don't expect more than around £300 each
Cheers
Bruce