Paul/Bob-
Not in the same league price-wise either!
-Don

Date: Fri, 3 Apr 2009 03:39:50 +0000
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Nikon Forestry 550



Paul,
   Thanks. I'll give it a try.
Bob
----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Jost" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2009 10:12:22 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Nikon Forestry 550


Bob,
 
The next time that you have a problem shooting 
through to a twig or hitting a small twig, try rotating the rangefinder 90 
degrees and shooting again.  I've read some reviews where the reviewer had 
information on the beam dispersion and shape for some models.  Some are 
elongated horizontally.  Swarovski had the best sensitivity for longest 
range and smallest targets while Leica had the tightest beam for shooting 
through.  They said that Bushnell and Nikon weren't even in their 
leagues.

Regards,
 
Paul

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, April 02, 2009 6:54 
  AM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Nikon Forestry 
  550
  

  
  James,

   

       I hope so toand believe that it just may. It has a 
  couple of search modes where it returns the smallest target or the fartherest 
  target. The Prostaff 440 returns the fartherst target very well. The Prostaff 
  550 doesn't. Leave it to the engineers to design something that works 
  beautifully and then screw it up in a succeeding model. Bushnell did that in 
  spades. Their earliest model the Litespeed 400 was a good design and worked 
  reliably. They designed a 800 meter version that also is a workhorse. 
  Everything went down hill thereafter. 

   

  Bob

  
----- Original Message -----
From: "James Parton" 
  <[email protected]>
To: "ENTSTrees" 
  <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2009 5:26:26 AM 
  GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Nikon Forestry 
  550


Bob,

Welcome back, and we await your report. I hope the 
  Nikon Forestry 550
measures up to the quality of the Nikon 
  440.

James Parton.

On Apr 1, 4:24 am, [email protected] 
  wrote:
> ENTS,
>
>      Well, it is me, 
  finally back into circulation. As a post-operative gift to myself, I've 
  ordered a Nikon Forestry 550. A new forester acquaintance from New Hampshire 
  asked my opinion of the instrument, so I feel duty bound to respond to him 
  with a real evaluation. I currently own a Nikon Prostaff 550 as well as a 
  Nikon Prostaff 440, but the Forestry 550 promises to be a poor man's 
  competitor to my LaserTech TruPuse 200. The Forestry 550 is actually a 
  hypsometer as opposed to just a rangefinder. When the 550 arrives, naturally 
  I'll give a full report on it to the list. 
>      
   I hope to resume the presentation of the problem set for the list. I 
  think I left off at #18 before my operation. If anyone wants a particular 
  problem type solved, please let me know. The purpose of developing the 
problem 
  set is to illustrate the solution to a wide range of tree measurement 
problems 
  including the most basic to our membership. Spreadsheet solutions are 
provided 
  for the computational intensive problems. This is your opportunity to speak 
  up. Any problem type, no matter how basic, just ask, and you shall 
  receive.
>       Much of my time over the next 
  several months will be spent completing the draft of Dendromorphometry - The 
  Art and Science of Measuring Trees in the Field. For our new members who 
  aren't aware, 5 of us (Dr. Lee Frelich, Dr. Don Bragg, Dr. Robert Van Pelt, 
  Will Blozan, and myself) have undertaken the mission of developing tree-based 
  mensuration as a formal discipline. We now have plenty of material and the 
  time is right for the book. I'll give little progress reports along the way 
to 
  completing the draft.
>        As a final message to 
  the membership, our numbers now stand at 328. I can remember a time when I 
  wasn't sure we'd ever get much above 75, but kindred spirits have been 
finding 
  us in increasing numbers. It has been soul satisfying to Will and I to watch 
  ENTS become well established and increasingly recognized as THE tree 
measuring 
  organization in the U.S.  BTW, before I forget, we will be having a major 
  ENTS rendezvous and old-growth forest conference in Oct here in western 
  Massachusetts. Gary Beluzo and I will get cracking on the planning soon and 
  keep the list fully informed.
>
> Bob 
   












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