Pellet Pinger
Well-Known Member
I bought one, hated it and sold it, bought another because with hindsight i should have given it a bit longer, hated that one too so sold it.
Buy a 008.
Buy a 008.
Interesting comment.I bought one, hated it and sold it, bought another because with hindsight i should have given it a bit longer, hated that one too so sold it.
Buy a 008.
Every time you add the 007 to your scope you need to calibrate it to your ret it using the X and Y axis, takes about 30 seconds.
Hmmm. Not sure “calibrate” is correct - all you need to do is centre the reticle using the drop down menu so that your crosshairs are in the middle of any footage/picture. If you don’t and the crosshairs are even way off centre it will still shoot to POI as you are seeing an electronic screen of the telescopic sight - so pretty much your call. As an aside 6x is a tad high for the Pard - it means your base magnification is 12x which unless you have a very stable rest and good position is likely too much for fieldwork.Every time you add the 007 to your scope you need to calibrate it to your ret it using the X and Y axis, takes about 30 seconds.
Interesting reply ... I normally shoot at 10x, (where the 1/2 mil-dot reticule is accurate) but was told that the 007 is at zero magnification unless you choose to magnify. Consequently I've been using mine at my normal 10x and not asking any magnification of the pard. As said, I have struggled a bit to get a clear, focussed sight picture but now have it at 'acceptable' with a correspondingly 'acceptable' focus of the reticule. If I shift either to gain clarity I lose focus completely on the other so it stays 'as is'.Hmmm. Not sure “calibrate” is correct - all you need to do is centre the reticle using the drop down menu so that your crosshairs are in the middle of any footage/picture. If you don’t and the crosshairs are even way off centre it will still shoot to POI as you are seeing an electronic screen of the telescopic sight - so pretty much your call. As an aside 6x is a tad high for the Pard - it means your base magnification is 12x which unless you have a very stable rest and good position is likely too much for fieldwork.
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There are lots of threads about Pards on this site - from memory (dangerous) the 007s have a starting point of 2x which means it doubles whatever your scope is set at so 6x is 12x, 8x is 16x etc. An initial high mag on your scope of choice like 6 or 8x will find you out particularly when you try it at night! I have a 007a and having tried it on several expensive scopes took the advice on this site and bought a cheap Hawke 3-9x50 - it is set at 3x (=6x) for day and night shooting and the parallax is set at 15m. As above there is lots of good info on Pards and scopes so do use the search function.Interesting reply ... I normally shoot at 10x, (where the 1/2 mil-dot reticule is accurate) but was told that the 007 is at zero magnification unless you choose to magnify. Consequently I've been using mine at my normal 10x and not asking any magnification of the pard. As said, I have struggled a bit to get a clear, focussed sight picture but now have it at 'acceptable' with a correspondingly 'acceptable' focus of the reticule. If I shift either to gain clarity I lose focus completely on the other so it stays 'as is'.
One day I will, perhaps, meet someone who actually understands these new-fangled gizmo's properly and they'll show me about 30 ways I'm doing it all wrong and the fox community will hate them forever ...
Friday afternoon will see me out making holes in a big cardboard box at the farm and I'll see if I can get the thing working for me, otherwise it'll be a case of taking the IR pill out of the lamp and putting the normal red pill back in. I don't often miss the bu$$ers with a good old fashioned lamp![]()
Yep, having 2 x 008’s on rifles already, I found it a total faff, image wise not as good, eye relief a pain, shoot off x10 with the day scope, put the 007 on the back and wind it back to x4 to get a similar FOV and it shoots 2” high and left.Interesting comment.
I had exactly the opposite experience. Bought an 008, hated it, far too complicated and not nearly as good for daytime as a proper day scope. Back to the shop, changed to an 007, click it onto the back of the scope and away you go.
Still, it would not do if we were all the same.
I have a 007a and 007s and I can confirm 100% the s has a base mag of 1x like the 007a or I'd have sent mine back.There are lots of threads about Pards on this site - from memory (dangerous) the 007s have a starting point of 2x which means it doubles whatever your scope is set at so 6x is 12x, 8x is 16x etc. An initial high mag on your scope of choice like 6 or 8x will find you out particularly when you try it at night! I have a 007a and having tried it on several expensive scopes took the advice on this site and bought a cheap Hawke 3-9x50 - it is set at 3x (=6x) for day and night shooting and the parallax is set at 15m. As above there is lots of good info on Pards and scopes so do use the search function.
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Can I ask what scope you use - as there is only one scope I have ever heard of this on. As per my previous post, the Pard should be used to focus exclusively on the reticle of the scope, using both the front and rear focuses of the Pard to get the best picture. Once that picture is clear, the Pard should not need adjusting at all - just use the parallax on the scope to gain a clear sight picture. Is this what you are doing?Interesting reply ... I normally shoot at 10x, (where the 1/2 mil-dot reticule is accurate) but was told that the 007 is at zero magnification unless you choose to magnify. Consequently I've been using mine at my normal 10x and not asking any magnification of the pard. As said, I have struggled a bit to get a clear, focussed sight picture but now have it at 'acceptable' with a correspondingly 'acceptable' focus of the reticule. If I shift either to gain clarity I lose focus completely on the other so it stays 'as is'.
One day I will, perhaps, meet someone who actually understands these new-fangled gizmo's properly and they'll show me about 30 ways I'm doing it all wrong and the fox community will hate them forever ...
Friday afternoon will see me out making holes in a big cardboard box at the farm and I'll see if I can get the thing working for me, otherwise it'll be a case of taking the IR pill out of the lamp and putting the normal red pill back in. I don't often miss the bu$$ers with a good old fashioned lamp![]()



As I’ve stated in my post above, check the scope itself isn’t faulty….you need at adjust the parallax to a 30 yard focus to get clear vision and I found that the POA shifted in the scope when you adjusted it, it was a well known fault in older hawke scopes, Google it….I'm new to the world of NV having treated myself to a pard007 recently. Initial trials were very promising despite some difficulty getting things all focussed up when fitted to the Hawke Vantage 6-24 on my .204. I've shunned the use of the in-built illuminator for the time being and am using an IR torch.
First time out with it I fairly easily picked out, and successfully shot, a couple of bunnies at about 200yds, then last weekend disaster seemed to strike
The caller was out and Charlie appeared right on cue, skirted the field and settled to sit and assess the wierdness from a position about 200yds from me. I settled the crosshairs on the upper chest/lower throat area and squeezed ... Very dead fox. The next one stood looking at me from about 160yds out. Bang = dead fox. Then the evenings light died and I put the Pard onto the rifle. An hour later a fox tracked the first one I shot and stood there sniffing the spot where #1 had fallen. Follow the drill and squeeze .... only to miss by God knows how much and off went Charlie at Warp 6. (Accompanied by a whining ricochet .. who says it can't happen with a .204 ? ! )
Then it happened again about 20 minutes later .. a complete 'sitter' at about 150yds. Settle in on the sticks and squeeze. Bang goes the rifle and off runs Charlie
I ended my evening right then and there. Not being 100% certain that shots are going where I want them to is a sign to go home.
Now ... I'm yet to have a chance to get out with my trusty cardboard box and check zero with and without the Pard.
I'm not known for missing foxes anywhere I'm willing to squeeze the trigger on them so I've been wondering if anyone else has experienced and POI change with the Pard 007 ?
I know I'm effectively using my original scope reticule etc etc but I'm bu$$ered if I can see a good reason for those 2 misses and it's bugging the whotsits out of me.



Will re-fit collar and get a clear reticule that way. Will then attempt to obtain focussed sight picture. Will then see if it shoots where I point it.That’s where you are going wrong sir .Don’t play with it .Set the collar so the cross hairs on scope are clear(after using the eye relief on scope to sharpen the cross hairs) in pard and the picture through the pard looks clear via the parallax .There is nothing else to faff at .
Edit,Yep, having 2 x 008’s on rifles already, I found it a total faff, image wise not as good, eye relief a pain, shoot off x10 with the day scope, put the 007 on the back and wind it back to x4 to get a similar FOV and it shoots 2” high and left.
I know loads swear by them but, not for me.
Edited to say all my scope are hawke from cheapos to £800 sidewinders and all work perfectly well with the pard .Edit,
also forgot to say the 007 magnified the ret too much for me. Head shooting rabbits at 120yds with the HMR was pretty much impossible.