Kestrel Pocket Weather Meters and Horus Vision have partnered to provide a powerful shooting tool that combines the critical environmental data and targeting software solutions required for precision shooting -- all in one four-ounce pocket-sized unit. Previously, shooters would need to obtain environmental data from a Kestrel meter and then input that data into a PDA loaded with Horus ATrag ballistics software. Now, the Kestrel Ballistics Weather Tracker with Horus ATrag Software contains all of the necessary data and solutions in one device to minimize user workload and distraction. Plus, the Kestrel meter is IP67 waterproof and MIL-STD-810F rugged, allowing users to avoid the expense and weight of a ruggedized PDA.
The new unit allows users to load and customize multiple guns and rounds from the extensive proprietary Horus database. Simple, intuitive screens allow the user to create up to six targets customized for location, distance, direction, declination and winds. The Kestrel meter's highly accurate measuring and averaging of wind and digital compass for target bearing and wind direction assists in defining the target winds. Once these parameters are set, the Kestrel meter takes over - tracking the current met data and automatically updating the firing solution using Horus ATrag advanced proprietary algorithms and taking Coriolis and spin drift into account. No additional user input is required.
Specifications:
| Feature | Abbreviation | Units | Minimum | Maximum | |
| Target | Active Targets | N/A | A through E | 1 | 5 |
| Target Range | TR | yards | 25 | 4000 | |
| meters | 23 | 3658 | |||
| Wind Direction | WD | o'clock | 1 | 12 | |
| degrees | 0 | 360 | |||
| Wind Speed | WS1 or WS2 | mph | 0 | 50 | |
| m/s | 0 | 22 | |||
| km/h | 0 | 80 | |||
| fps | 0 | 73 | |||
| knots | 0 | 43 | |||
| Direction of Fire | DoF | degrees | 0 | 360 | |
| o'clock | 1 | 12 | |||
| Inclination Angle | Ideg | degrees | 0 | 60 | |
| Inclination Cosine | Icos | no units | 1.000 | 0.500 | |
| Target Speed | TS | mph | 0 | 50 | |
| m/s | 0 | 22 | |||
| km/h | 0 | 80 | |||
| fps | 0 | 73 | |||
| knots | 0 | 43 | |||
| Target Direction of Movement | TD | Left to Right OR Right to Left | |||
| Gun | Name Characters | N/A | 0 through 9; A-Z; a-z; -+/.:&* and space | ||
| Muzzle Velocity | MV | fps | 300 | 4500 | |
| m/s | 91 | 1372 | |||
| Ballistic Coefficient | BC | no units | 0.100 | 2.000 | |
| Bullet Weight | BW | grains | 10 | 1500 | |
| grams | 0.6 | 97.2 | |||
| Bullet Diameter | BD | inches | 0.10 | 1.00 | |
| mm | 2.54 | 25.40 | |||
| Zero Range | ZR | yards | 25 | 1000 | |
| meters | 23 | 914 | |||
| Bore Height | BH | inches | 0.10 | 5.00 | |
| cm | 0.25 | 12.70 | |||
| Rifling Twist | RT | inches/revolution | 1.00 | 36.00 | |
| cm/revolution | 2.54 | 91.44 | |||
| Twist Direction | RTd | Left OR Right | |||
| Rifling | Click | /mil | 1 | 10 | |
| /tmoa | 1 | 10 | |||
| /smoa* | 1 | 10 | |||
| Environment | Latitude | Lat | degrees | 90S | 90N |
| Temperature | Temp | fahrenheit | -50 | 140 | |
| celsius | -46 | 60 | |||
| Station Pressure | SP | inHg | 12.00 | 32.00 | |
| mb | 406.4 | 1083.6 | |||
| hPa | 406.4 | 1083.6 | |||
| psi | 5.89 | 15.72 | |||
| Relative Humidity | RH | % | 1 | 100 | |
| Density Altitude (computed) | Dalt | ft | -10732 | 32767 | |
| meters | -3271 | 9987 | |||
| Coriolis | Coriol | Yes OR No | |||
*smoa removed from code higher than v2042
About the 4500
For years our customers have been asking for wind direction along with wind speed. The Kestrel 4500 does just that with its built in digital compass. But it doesn’t stop there. It also calculates crosswind and headwind/tailwind with reference to a user-set target heading, and stores the information along with all the other environmental readings in its 1400 data point memory.
Pair the 4500 Wind Meter with the Kestrel Vane Mount and you have a data-logging weather station that sets up in seconds and rotates in the slightest of breezes. Did we mention that the whole kit is the ultimate in portability? It packs down into a 2 x 6 inch pouch and weighs under 8 ounces.
Military personnel and pilots flying in darkness are often concerned with preserving their night vision. Due to overwhelming demand from our military customers, the Kestrel NV line was added in 2005.
The Kestrel 4500NV is available with an Olive Drab case or a Desert Tan case. The unit has a night-vision preserving backlight which helps users to sustain natural night vision. The NV's backlight incorporates an optical filter to reduce overall brightness and minimize blue and green spectrum light to preserve night vision. Additionally, NV backlights are also much dimmer than a standard backlight, making it more difficult to detect with the naked eye in night operations. This backlight appears soft greyish pink, not red, and is still in the visible spectrum, so is not compatible with night-vision equipment.
It takes 30 to 45 minutes for the average eye to adapt to darkness and maximize night vision. Even a short burst of white, yellow, green or blue light “bleaches out” the rod cell photoreceptors in the eye and causes night blindness until the entire adaptation process can take place again. Light in the red spectrum does not cause this “bleaching out”, preventing night blindness and night vision fatigue.