Maybe so Bruce but the tec is starting to appear. Like anything, Mk1 of anything is usually a poor choice.
Better for others to pay for ongoing product R&D as I see it.
As you have much wider access to a range of kit then you are able to put a dimension on equipment and see it in use over time to ID the wrinkle etc.
Shame as my mate just bought one and likes it.
Dont worry, I will let him down gently.....
I remained to be convinced that optical/thermal "fusion" is going to be of any significant benefit in non military applications.
The biggest shortcoming of currently available thermal imagers is their lack of resolution compared to optical systems.
The pixels in thermal sensors are not, and will never be, as small as those in optical systems, so other than having a thermal sensor with a huge, expensive objective lens, thermal imagers will never produce as detailed an image as even current optical sensors are capable of.
However, thermal imagers produce images with far more contrast that the monochrome images produce by optical sensors illuminated by IR and I would argue that the lower resolution of thermal images is more than offset by their higher contrast.
I would also argue that best current thermal imagers, in the hands of experienced users, are good enough at target recognition that an optical image "fused" onto the thermal image would not improve their ability to recognise live animals.
The idea of "fusing" or overlaying an optical image onto a thermal image (or vice versa) is, at first glance, appealing.
It would appear to offer the contrast of the thermal image with the resolution of an optical image.
However, there are some significant practical problems to overcome
If the thermal and optical images are to be overlaid on top of each other, they have to be the same size.
That means the field of view of each sensor/lens must be the same
Field of view depends on lens focal length and sensor physical size and because thermal sensors are much larger than optical sensors, it's the thermal part of the system that sets the field of view (and therefore magnification)
The result is that the focal length of the lens used with the optical sensor is much shorter than needed to get high resolution images.
Once both images are the same size, they have to be synchronised (both images move together at the same speed) and overlaid without any shift in the relative positions.
The Gryphon does this part badly as can be seen from this video (from about 5:50) which clearly shows the presenter as wearing 2 pairs of glass when the Gryphon is in "fusion" mode
Good quality fusion may come some day, but at the moment, it's no more than a gimmick to attract uneducated buyers.
Cheers
Bruce