Guide DN70M 2.0 Thermal & 4K Night Vision Binocular with 1,500m LRF
Most hunters who want a single optic that works from midday glassing to a pitch-black stalk end up carrying two — a daytime binocular and a separate thermal — or paying $3,000-plus for a fusion unit. The Guide DN70M 2.0 folds both into one chassis: a 4K (3840 × 2160) digital day/night sensor fused with a 256 × 192 thermal core and a built-in 1,500-meter laser rangefinder — true multispectral imaging at roughly a third of what the Pulsar and AGM fusion binoculars in its category cost. Key Features Multispectral fusion — 4K digital + thermal in one view — a high-resolution 3840 × 2160 CMOS sensor renders daylight and low-light scenes with real detail and color, while the 256 × 192 12µm VOx thermal core cuts through total darkness, fog, and smoke. Selectable fusion modes blend the two into one natural image. 4K recording with audio and 256 GB onboard storage — capture stills and 3840 × 2160 video with sound, with room for long sessions without swapping media. Built-in 1,500 m laser rangefinder — range targets to 1,630 yards without reaching for a separate device. Field navigation suite — integrated GPS, digital compass, and gyroscope for marking and returning to locations. True binocular ergonomics — a dual-eyepiece body with stepless 58–72 mm interpupillary adjustment, a precision focus wheel, and customizable buttons for silent, one-handed operation in the dark. Dual-battery, fast-charge power — a built-in cell plus a hot-swappable 18650; 18 W fast charging reaches 80% in about an hour. Built to take a beating — IP67 weather sealing, a –20 °C to 50 °C operating range, and Guide's 10-year warranty backed by US service in Texas. Who It's For All-conditions hunters who want one optic for daytime glassing and total-darkness scanning, with ranging built in. Value-driven buyers cross-shopping fusion binoculars — the DN70M brings thermal-plus-4K-digital fusion to roughly $1,500, where the Pulsar Merger Duo, AGM Voyage, and InfiRay Gemini run $3,300–$4,100. Its closest same-price rival is the ATN Binox 6 Dual 256. Observers who prefer a binocular to a monocular — dual-eye viewing is easier on the eyes over a long sit. A note on the thermal sensor: the 256 × 192 thermal core is detection-grade — it excels at picking heat out of the dark — while the 4K digital channel carries the fine-detail and identification work. If long-range thermal resolution is your single priority, a dedicated 384- or 640-class thermal optic will out-resolve it. The DN70M's advantage is doing both jobs, plus laser ranging, in one rugged package that costs a fraction of premium fusion binoculars.
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- Default Title — 1499.00 USD — In stock
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