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Presenting the HikMicro NEOS thermal riflescope, which packs a hyper-sensitive 18mK sensor and flawless shutterless imaging into a sleek, affordable 30mm tube chassis
The HIKMICRO NEOS NH35L is a thermal riflescope built around a familiar 30mm tube chassis, aimed squarely at airgun and rimfire shooters — though its specification tells a broader story. Priced at £1,499.99, it sits at the top of a three-model NEOS range alongside the NH25L (£999.99) and the NE25 (£849.99), giving shooters at every budget a route into HIKMICRO thermal without compromising on build or usability.
The NEOS range signals what HIKMICRO is calling the “Alpex 4K Lite Revolution” — taking the philosophy of that popular digital scope and applying it to thermal. The 30mm tube chassis is the same, the layout is familiar, and the intent is clear: make high-end thermal imaging accessible and easy to use for shooters who may previously have found it too expensive, too bulky, or too unfamiliar. At this price the NH35L faces serious competition from Pixfra and Nocpix, but after spending time in the field with it, there is genuine substance behind the pitch.
Testing was carried out with the scope mounted on a Daystate Delta Wolf via Wülf rings across a range of conditions: open fields, hedgerows, dense woodland, and close-quarters barn work. Quarry ranged from rats at 10m to hares at several hundred metres, with sessions running from daylight into full darkness. Ed Jackson reports a positive verdict with one key caveat — which model in the range is right for your shooting matters.

| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Price (RRP) | £1,499.99 — prices are RRP at time of publication and may have changed |
| UK Distributor | Elite Optical — eliteoptical.co.uk |
| Sensor | 384×288 @ 12µm thermal detector |
| Thermal Sensitivity (NETD) | <18mK |
| Display | 0.49in AMOLED |
| Magnification (true base) | 3.2×–25.6× (marketed as 4×–32×) |
| Tube Diameter | 30mm (standard rings compatible) |
| Length (without eyecup) | 290mm |
| Length (with eyecup) | 345.6mm |
| Weight | 570g |
| Minimum Focus Distance | 3m |
| Field of View | 13.1m @ 100m |
| Eye Relief | 55mm |
| Exit Pupil | 8mm |
| Laser Rangefinder | Integrated, up to 1,000m |
| Battery | Single 18650 rechargeable (included) |
| Battery Life | 8 hours |
| Start-up Time | 1 second |
| IP Rating | IP67 |
| Image Processing | Image Pro 3.0 algorithm |
| Shutterless System | HikMicro Shutterless Image System (HSIS) with Sync Pro algorithm |
| Colour Palettes | Black Hot, White Hot, Red Hot, Fusion, Red Monochrome, Green Monochrome |
| Zeroing Profiles | 5 independent profiles |
| Max Recoil Rating | Same as HikMicro Alpex Pro (centrefire compatible) |

Mount the NH35L and the first thing you notice is how light it is. At 570g it is exceptionally lean for a thermal riflescope, and that saving has a real effect on how a rifle handles across a long session. Importantly, this is not mass shed at the expense of feel — the unit is solidly put together and carries an IP67 protection rating, which means dustproof and submersible to one metre.
The 30mm tube chassis is immediately recognisable to anyone who has used the Alpex 4K Lite, and the familiarity extends to the mounting process. Standard rings fit without adapters, which removes one of the traditional friction points of moving into thermal. At 290mm without the rubber eyecup and 345.6mm with it, the profile is compact enough that it does not unbalance a lighter airgun setup. The rotatable, magnetic objective lens cap is a well-executed detail — small things like that matter over a long night.
The control layout mirrors a conventional scope closely. A rubberised focusing collar sits at the objective end, a dioptre adjustment on the eyepiece, and the central saddle carries three turrets. The right-hand turret has a small rubber power button — a single press drops to standby. The left-hand turret houses the single removable 18650 battery, which is supplied in the box. The top turret carries three rubberised buttons managing the menu, video recording and the laser rangefinder, with a rotating collar for magnification and menu navigation. Start-up from cold takes one second.

The 384×288 @ 12µm sensor with a sensitivity of less than 18mK is the NH35L’s headline specification, and the results bear it out. Image clarity across a range of environments was consistently strong: scanning fields, hedgerows, dense woodland and old farm equipment all produced a clean, well-resolved picture. In daylight at 10m, a rat drinking deep within dense foliage was clearly identifiable. At 37m in the dark, individual foliage between the shooter and a rabbit was visible — a detail that matters practically because it flags potential pellet deflection before you take the shot.
As night fell and the ambient temperature dropped, performance improved further. A greater temperature differential between quarry and background produces a sharper, more defined image, and the NH35L made the most of it. Rabbits were tracked and identified without difficulty at ranges from 30m out to 150m. The image is processed through HikMicro’s Image Pro 3.0 algorithm and displayed on a 0.49in AMOLED screen that is clear and well-matched to the size of the unit.

Most thermal scopes use a mechanical shutter to periodically recalibrate the detector. The image freezes briefly — typically for one to two seconds at unpredictable intervals. In a handheld spotter this is a minor irritant. In a riflescope, particularly when tracking fast-moving quarry, it is a more meaningful problem.
The HikMicro Shutterless Image System (HSIS) eliminates this entirely. Paired with the Sync Pro algorithm for rapid image processing, the view is uninterrupted throughout. In practice that means no frozen frame at the critical moment before a shot. It is a straightforward technology to explain but a genuinely useful advantage in the field, and it performed without fault across all testing sessions.

The specification sheet lists a base magnification of 4.0×, but the review unit displayed 3.2× on screen. This discrepancy reflects the true native optical magnification of the 35mm lens rather than a rounded marketing figure — it is relatively common in thermal optics, but buyers should be aware of it when comparing specifications across brands.
For airgun and pest control use the 3.2× true base is actually the more useful figure. It provides a slightly wider field of view than a true 4× would, which matters when tracking fast-moving rats or squirrels at close quarters. At a measured range of 11m the field of view spanned approximately 1.4m, which tallies precisely with the official specification of 13.1m at 100m. Digital magnification extends from this base to 25.6× for longer ranges.

Zeroing was carried out using the tinfoil cross method — a small piece of tinfoil taped to the target board and angled slightly skywards to create a clean temperature differential against the background. The one-shot zero function worked without complication, and a few confirmation groups confirmed a precise zero. The menu system felt familiar given prior use of the Alpex Pro, which accelerated the process considerably.
The onboard ballistic calculator was set up using muzzle velocity data taken directly from the Delta Wolf’s display after each shot, making the input process straightforward. The integrated 1,000m laser rangefinder is operated from the top turret and functioned accurately throughout. Five independent zeroing profiles allow the scope to be used across multiple calibres or rifles without resetting the primary zero. The full menu also offers a variety of reticle designs and the option to toggle between observation and detection modes depending on requirements.

Colour palettes include Black Hot, White Hot, Red Hot, Fusion, Red Monochrome and Green Monochrome. You can customise which palettes cycle through on a quick press of the menu button, which is a practical touch when switching between environments. The interface throughout is intuitive — HIKMICRO’s prior work on the Alpex platform is evident, and this is not a system that requires a manual to operate in the field.


The HikMicro NEOS NH35L is a well-built, genuinely capable thermal riflescope that delivers on its headline claims. The 18mK sensitivity produces a quality image across a range of conditions, the shutterless system performs exactly as described, and the familiar 30mm chassis makes this one of the more accessible thermal scopes to mount and use from day one.
At £1,499.99, the question is which shooter it is right for. For rimfire users, and for anyone who might also want to push it onto a centrefire — the eye relief, exit pupil and recoil rating all support this — it represents strong value. For dedicated airgunners whose sessions are predominantly close-range pest control, the NH25L at £999.99 is worth a serious look first.
The HikMicro NEOS NH35L has an RRP of £1,499.99 in the UK. It sits at the top of the NEOS range, which also includes the NH25L at £999.99 and the NE25 at £849.99. All prices are RRP at time of publication and may have changed — contact Elite Optical at eliteoptical.co.uk for current availability.
The NH35L features a larger 35mm lens, a 384×288 thermal sensor, and a base magnification of 3.2× extending to 25.6×, priced at £1,499.99. The NH25L uses a smaller 25mm lens with a 320×240 sensor and is available at £999.99. For airgun-focused shooters carrying out close-range pest control, the NH25L is likely the more practical and cost-effective choice. The NH35L is the stronger option for rimfire or centrefire use.
Yes, though the smaller NH25L in the NEOS range may be the better fit for dedicated airgunners. The NH35L’s 3m minimum focus distance, wide field of view at close range, and shutterless imaging all make it technically well suited to barn and bait station work. However, at £1,499.99 you are paying for magnification and lens size that airgun ranges rarely demand. The NH25L at £999.99 offers a more focused package for sub-12ft/lb use.
Yes. The NH35L has an integrated laser rangefinder capable of measuring distances up to 1,000m, controlled from the top turret. It works alongside an onboard ballistic calculator that accounts for hold-over at varying distances. Muzzle velocity data can be inputted directly to configure drop compensation for different loads or calibres.
The HikMicro NEOS NH35L is available through Elite Optical, the UK distributor, at eliteoptical.co.uk. The NH35L has an RRP of £1,499.99. Contact Elite Optical directly for stockist information and current availability.
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