Ok - that makes a lot more sense . . . thanks for clarifying it. I appreciate knowing it comes form direct experience in the field.
I'll admit have not used mine out past about 50 yards yet, but the data I have from it with .22 pellets seems very robust, with good usable S/N values (it's even better with .25 pellets). I do have some .22 data out to 100 yards that someone sent me, and it looks good out to about 75 yards but gets sketchy after that. I don't know how the radar companies did it, but the data does seem to be meaningful a good ways beyond 20 meters - to at least a bit over double that (although that is with a .22 - I did a bit of a trial with a .177 and it was no where near as good; that might be about 20-25 meters or so). I'm happy with working with data under 50 yards for the BC work I want to do with it as I mostly shoot .22 caliber. More distance would be better, but this is a great start. I do have the higher power USA model - I doubt the lower power versions would do anywhere near as well.
I went down this path because I had done some testing with my Chrony at a distance to gather data to analyze, but since I only have the one I had to work on string averages at both the muzzle and down range, at least as a starting point. What I observed kind of blew me away - I was finding a significantly higher ES down range vs. at the muzzle. Logic would say that if BC was anything close to constant, it should be less down range because of the amount of total speed scrubbed off - proportionally, the % ES would result in a lower number at slower speeds after having flown down range. But since it was the opposite, I thought through it long and hard and the only thing I could come up with as a cause would be variation in BC from shot to shot.
Since I did want to investigate this phenomena, and to do it properly I hacd to be able to work on individual shots, not averages of shot strings. I was left having to decide whether to get multiple conventional chronies or try the radar approach. I sat on the decision for a few years as the original Lab Radar was quite a bit of money at the time, but with the price drops from the next generation launching I was willing to give it a try. I'm glad I did, and am happy with it for my uses. I'll probably upgrade when the third or fourth generation comes out.