
Quick answer
The Nocpix Rico 2 H75R LRF is the long-reach 640 in Nocpix's flagship Rico 2 thermal weapon sight family — a 640×512 thermal rifle scope with a 75 mm germanium lens, built-in 1,200-yard laser rangefinder, and ballistic calculator on the shared Rico 2 platform. NETD ≤15 mK, 60 Hz refresh, 2,560×2,560 AMOLED display, 4× to 8× magnification, 4,250-yard detection range, recoil-activated video, magnetic charging, and the recoil-mitigating quick-detach mount included. Built for long-distance hog, coyote, and predator hunters who want 640 image quality at extreme range.
Who this is for
Best for
Best for serious hog and predator hunters who want a premium thermal rifle scope with a laser rangefinder for cleaner holds and better target confirmation at night.
Not ideal for
Not ideal for buyers who only hunt a few nights a year, want the lowest-cost entry point, or mainly need a handheld scanner instead of a rifle-mounted optic.
Quick specifications
- Category
- Thermal Rifle Scopes
- Sensor Resolution
- 640x512
- Magnification
- 4.0-8.0x
- Objective Lens
- 75.0
- Detection Range
- 4250.0
- Rangefinder
- Yes
Why buy from Thermal Bros
With premium thermal scopes, the expensive mistake is buying the wrong fit. Thermal Bros helps you compare sensor tier, lens size, and rangefinding value in plain English so you end up with the right optic, not just the most expensive one.
Full product description
The Nocpix Rico 2 H75R LRF is the long-reach 640 in Nocpix's flagship Rico 2 thermal weapon sight family — the same 640×512 sensor as the H50R, paired with a much larger 75 mm germanium objective lens that pushes detection past 4,000 yards. It's the right Rico 2 for the hunter who wants 640 image quality at extreme range without stepping up to the 1280-sensor S75R.
The H75R runs the full Rico 2 platform: 2560×2560 round AMOLED display, integrated 1,200-yard laser rangefinder with ballistic calculator, recoil-activated video, magnetic charging, spare battery, and a recoil-mitigating quick-detach mount. The 75 mm lens is where the price step over the H50R lives — and it's the right step when reach is the deciding factor in your hunting.
The Rico 2 family — how the H75R fits
The Rico 2 series is a four-model tiered family on a shared platform. The naming code tells you the tier: L = 384 sensor, H = 640 sensor, S = 1280 sensor. The number that follows is the objective lens size in millimeters.
- L42R — 384×288 sensor, 42 mm lens. Entry into the Rico 2 platform.
- H50R — 640×512 sensor, 50 mm lens. The versatile middle of the line for medium-range hunting.
- H75R — 640×512 sensor, 75 mm lens. Same 640 sensor as the H50R, but a 75 mm objective for extreme-range reach (~4,250 yd detection).
- S75R — 1280×1024 sensor at 60 Hz, 75 mm lens, stepless digital zoom to 30×. The 1280 flagship.
Step up from the H50R to the H75R when extreme-range reach matters more than weight savings. Step up from the H75R to the S75R when you want a 1280 sensor at the same 75 mm lens size — finer resolution for hardest-target identification.
Why the 75 mm lens matters
The H75R and H50R share the exact same 640×512 thermal sensor. What changes between them is the objective lens: 50 mm on the H50R, 75 mm on the H75R. A 75 mm lens gathers significantly more thermal signal than a 50 mm — that extra light translates directly into longer detection range and cleaner, brighter imagery at distance.
The H50R detects out to ~2,800 yards. The H75R pushes that past 4,000. For close-to-mid range hunting, the 50 mm is the right balance. For long-distance hog, coyote, and predator work — across pastureland, cut fields, or open ranch country — the 75 mm lens is what lets the 640 sensor reach as far as the sensor is capable of.
What you get with the H75R
- 640×512 thermal sensor with 12 μm pixel pitch. Fine thermal detail and confident target identification at extreme range.
- NETD ≤15 mK. Sharper thermal contrast and cleaner edge definition in difficult heat conditions.
- 75 mm F/1.0 germanium objective. The big-lens build in the 640 tier. Maximum thermal signal gathering for the 4,250-yard detection range.
- 4× base magnification, up to 8× with digital zoom. Higher base mag than the H50R (3×) — natural to the 75 mm lens, and the right base for the H75R's long-range mission.
- 60 Hz refresh rate. Real-time imaging on moving targets without smear.
- Built-in 1,200-yard laser rangefinder + ballistic calculator. Range a target, get drop data instantly — the system uses your input bullet velocity and ballistic coefficient to compute the correction for the ranged distance.
- 2560×2560 round AMOLED display. Crisp, immersive viewing across long sits — important on a long-range scope where you'll spend time studying detail.
- Picture-in-Picture mode for keeping a zoomed target view alongside the wider field of view.
- Recoil-activated video and onboard recording to capture the shot automatically.
- Magnetic charging port for fast recharges; spare battery included.
- Recoil-mitigating quick-detach mount included — the same upgraded mount that ships with the S75R, engineered for the heavier 75 mm-class build and consistent return to zero.
- Five-hour battery life for full nights in the field.
Who the H75R is built for
- Long-distance hog hunters working open country, cut fields, and pastureland
- Coyote and predator hunters who hunt where shots can stretch past 500 yards
- Ranch operators managing predators across larger properties where reach matters
- Buyers who want 640 image quality at extreme range and don't need 1280 resolution
- Hunters cross-shopping the Rico 2 family who hit a wall at the H50R's 2,800-yard detection and need more reach
The trade-off versus the H50R is weight (2.76 lb vs. 2.04 lb) and physical size. If your hunting style is close-to-mid range through brush, the H50R is the better fit. If reach is the question your scope needs to answer, the H75R is the right Rico 2.
Full specifications
- Thermal sensor: 640 × 512, 12 μm pixel pitch
- NETD: ≤15 mK
- Objective lens: 75 mm F/1.0 germanium
- Base optical magnification: 4×
- Magnification range: 4× to 8× (digital zoom)
- Detection range: up to 4,250 yards
- Display: 2560 × 2560 round AMOLED
- Refresh rate: 60 Hz
- Laser rangefinder: built-in, 1,200-yard range
- Ballistic calculator: included (input MV and BC for drop)
- Picture-in-Picture: yes
- Recoil-activated video: yes
- Onboard recording: yes
- Charging: magnetic charging port
- Battery life: up to approximately 5 hours
- Spare battery: included
- Mount: recoil-mitigating quick-detach mount included
- Weight: 2.76 lb (44.09 oz / 1.25 kg)
- Warranty: manufacturer warranty (Nocpix)
Frequently asked questions
Where does the H75R fit in the Rico 2 family?
The H75R is the long-reach 640 in the four-model Rico 2 series. The "H" signals the 640 sensor tier; the "75" is the 75 mm objective lens. Below it sit the L42R (384 entry tier) and the H50R (same 640 sensor with a 50 mm lens for medium range); above it sits the S75R (1280 flagship at the same 75 mm lens size).
What's the difference between the H75R and the H50R?
Same 640×512 sensor on both. The H75R has a 75 mm lens with 4× base magnification and detection out to ~4,250 yards. The H50R has a 50 mm lens with 3× base magnification and detection to ~2,800 yards. Same Rico 2 platform — display, LRF, ballistic calculator, recording. Choose the H75R when extreme-range reach is the deciding factor; choose the H50R when balance, lighter weight, and a more manageable scope size matter more.
What's the difference between the H75R and the S75R?
Same 75 mm lens. The H75R has a 640×512 sensor with 4× base magnification and 8× digital zoom. The S75R steps up to a 1280×1024 sensor with 3× base magnification and stepless digital zoom to 30× — more pixel resolution to spread across the same scene, finer detail for hardest-target identification, and a longer zoom range. Detection range is similar on both (~4,250 yd) because the 75 mm lens defines the reach. Step up to the S75R when image resolution at extreme range is what you're paying for; stay with the H75R when 640 image quality is enough and the price step doesn't earn its keep for your hunting.
Is the H75R a good thermal scope for long-range hog hunting?
Yes — the H75R is built for it. The combination of a 640 sensor, 75 mm F/1.0 lens, 4× base magnification, and 8× digital zoom gives you the reach to identify and engage hogs across open country, cut fields, and pastureland. The integrated LRF and ballistic calculator handle distance and dial-in for shots that stretch past where most thermal scopes are useful.
How accurate is the laser rangefinder?
The Rico 2 family's integrated LRF ranges to 1,200 yards. The ballistic calculator uses your input bullet velocity and ballistic coefficient to compute drop for the ranged distance.
What battery does the H75R use and how long does it last?
Rechargeable battery with a magnetic charging port. Runtime is up to approximately 5 hours on a charge, and a spare battery is included.
Does the H75R record video?
Yes. Onboard recording with recoil-activated video — when the rifle fires, capture starts automatically.
Will the H75R hold zero through recoil?
Yes. The H75R ships with the recoil-mitigating quick-detach mount — the same upgraded mount that comes on the S75R — engineered for the heavier 75 mm-class build and reliable return to zero on remount.
How heavy is the H75R?
2.76 lb (44.09 oz / 1.25 kg). The 75 mm objective is where the weight comes from. If a lighter scope is the priority, the H50R is the right Rico 2 — same 640 sensor, 50 mm lens, and 2.04 lb.
What's the warranty?
Nocpix backs the Rico 2 H75R with their standard manufacturer warranty.
Nocpix App
Wi-Fi integration with iOS and Android devices
Technical Specifications
-
Sensor Resolution (px)
640x512 -
Display Resolution (px)
2560x2560 -
NETD Rating
15.0 -
Detection Range
4250.0 -
Refresh Rate (Hz)
60.0 -
Field of View
4.7
-
Weight
2.76 oz -
Dimensions
13.26 in 4.57 in 3.54 in -
HZ - refresh rate
60.0 -
Category
Thermal Rifle Scopes -
Thermal Sensor Resolution
640x512 -
Display Resolution
2560x2560 -
Pixel Pitch
12.0 -
NETD Rating
15.0 -
Detection Range
4250.0 -
Range Finder
Yes -
Clip-On
No -
Magnification Base
4.0 -
Magnification Max
8.0 -
Objective Lens
75.0 -
Field of View
4.7