Vic, Will, Don, Ed, et al: 



   Attached is an Excel spreadsheet that shows 25 tests of the accuracy of the 
Forestry 550's laser with comparisons to the Tru Pulse 200 and Tru Pulse 360. 
All in all, I think the 550 performed quite well. 

    I've included the average of the absolute values of the deviations of each 
instrument from the respective tape measured distances and also thrown in the 
standard deviations. At greater distances, the 550 seems to trail off in 
performance, but it is still good enough and well within advertised accuracy 
specification. The TruPulse 360 is a super instrument, but it also costs 
$1,600.  More tests tomorrow. For today, I'm pooped. It is amazing how quickly 
one tires out after surgery with only the smallest amount of moving around. 



Bob 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Victor Shelburne" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 7, 2009 1:57:06 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Nikon Forestry 550- Sweet! 




Bob: 



Very cool. Glad to know you have approved it as I have been holding off waiting 
for a good review. 



Vic Shelburne 

SC Big Tree Program 





From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 07, 2009 12:47 PM 
To: [email protected] 
Cc: Neal, Haven 
Subject: [ENTS] Nikon Forestry 550- Sweet! 





ENTS, 



    My brand new Nikon Forestry 550 arrived this morning and I just completed 
going through all its features. I give the instrument two solid thumbs up. It 
is a real hypsometer that can compete with the LaserTech TruPulse 200 for half 
the price. The 550 doesn't compete with the TruPulse 360, which has added 
functionality. 

     I am thrilled to report that the Forestry 550 does the math right. It has 
a single point mode and a double point mode. In the single point mode, you 
shoot a target and the 550 returns the linear distance of the point, 
vertical distance (height) of the point, horizontal distance of the point, and 
angle of the point. The double point mode measures the full height of the 
target tree. You shoot the crown an then the base  (or vice versa) and the 550 
returns the full height (vertical separation of the two points) and several 
other returns and shows them in an external LED that is easy to read. 

      The 550 has two target acquisition modes: 1st target accessed 
and fartherest target accessed. The latter mode is appropriate to shooting to 
the top of a tree with a cluster of branches. It is easy to switch between the 
modes. 

      Distances can be displayed in yards, meters, or feet. Angles are always 
in degrees. Sweet! This is the instrument for measurers who don't want to fuss 
with the math, but who want the internal process to produce the right answer in 
contrast the manufacters who mindlessly program in the tangent method for tree 
height determination, when they could have just as easily done it right. 

      I'll provide more information over the next few days, but as of this 
point my $350.00 hypsometer is a very, very good buy. Nikon or their Chinese 
manufacturers must have been paying attention to ENTS. Better late than never. 



Bob  







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