Leupold Launches the LCO Pro F2

The original LCO earned a loyal following among serious carbine shooters. Today, Leupold drops the Pro F2 — 30 illumination settings, motion sensor battery management, four reticle options, and a rapid dial built for speed. Gun Talk Media’s Chris Cerino was on the range in Grand Island, Nebraska, running drills with Kyle Lamb and Doug Koenig, to find out if it holds up under pressure.

Gun Talk Media’s Chris Cerino attended the Leupold LCO Pro F2 launch event in Grand Island, Nebraska, sponsored by Leupold. The event featured training sessions with Kyle Lamb and Doug Koenig, both Leupold representatives, running attendees through live-fire drills specifically designed to stress-test the new optic’s speed, clarity, and illumination performance across varying light conditions. The following first look incorporates both the official Leupold press release and Chris’s firsthand observations from the range.

From the Range in Grand Island: Chris Cerino’s First Look

You don’t learn what a red dot can do by looking at a spec sheet. You learn it when somebody like Kyle Lamb is running you through a drill at speed and the dot either shows up where it’s supposed to, or it doesn’t. That’s the thing about getting to work with people who operate at that level — they have zero patience for gear that doesn’t earn its spot, and that standard filters back to everything you’re running.

Leupold brought the Pro F2 to Grand Island, Nebraska for its launch event, and they didn’t set up a nice comfortable square range with plenty of time between strings. They brought Kyle Lamb and Doug Koenig to run us through drills that were specifically designed to put pressure on the optic — transitions, movement, low-light… the works. Leupold wanted shooters to see exactly how the F2 performs when you’re not taking your time.

The short version: it performs. The longer version is below, but that’s the headline. The dot was right there every time. The illumination controls responded exactly when you needed them to. And the picture through that glass is genuinely as good as anything in this category at this price point, which is $899 MSRP.

“You don’t learn what a red dot can do by looking at a spec sheet. You learn it when somebody like Kyle Lamb is running you through a drill at speed and the dot either shows up or it doesn’t. The F2 showed up.” Chris Cerino, Gun Talk Media

Kyle Lamb, Doug Koenig, and What It Means That They Were There

Leupold didn’t bring just anyone to Grand Island to run these drills. Kyle Lamb is a former U.S. Army Special Forces sergeant major with multiple combat deployments, the founder of Viking Tactics, and one of the most respected firearms instructors in the country. Doug Koenig is a 27-time USPSA National Champion and world-record holder in practical shooting. Between the two of them, you’re looking at a combined five or six decades of experience running guns at the absolute highest levels across combat and competition.

The significance of having these two specifically run the launch event is not just marketing. Leupold is making a clear statement about who the LCO Pro F2 is for and what it’s expected to do. Kyle Lamb represents the defensive and tactical end of the user base — people who carry carbines professionally, who need gear that works in the dark and in the mud and under genuine stress. Doug Koenig represents the competitive end — people who run gear as fast as it can possibly be run and immediately know when something is slowing them down or letting them down.

When an optic earns approval from both ends of that spectrum in a single event, that’s not a coincidence. That’s a product that works across the full range of what a serious red dot is asked to do.

What’s New: How the Pro F2 Builds on the Original LCO Pro

The original Leupold LCO has been around for years and built a loyal following in the carbine community — military, law enforcement, competitive shooters, serious recreational shooters. It earned that following on the strength of its construction (machined US aluminum, the same standard Leupold applies to everything they build), its glass clarity, and the lifetime guarantee that backs every Leupold product. The original had 16 illumination settings and a 1 MOA center dot.

The Pro F2 takes that foundation and adds a meaningful set of upgrades that address the things the original LCO shooters consistently asked for. Here’s what actually changed:

30 Total Illumination Settings (Was 16)

Twenty daylight settings and ten dedicated night vision settings. The original LCO had 16 total. The expansion to 30 — with a full ten dedicated night vision levels — is the most significant practical upgrade for anyone running the F2 with NVGs. With the NFA tax stamp gone and the suppressor market booming, more gun owners are running suppressed setups with night vision capability. The ten dedicated NV settings are not an afterthought.

On the range in Grand Island, Chris ran the F2 through several light transitions specifically to evaluate the NV settings. The protected night vision button prevents you from accidentally activating the NV settings in daylight — which matters when you’ve got NVGs up and a bright NV illumination setting would flare your tubes. That’s a detail that comes from people who actually use this gear operationally, not from a product committee.

The Rapid Illumination Dial: Half Turn for Full Range

This is the feature that Chris noticed most immediately on the range. The rapid illumination dial cycles through all 20 daylight settings with a quick half-turn spin in either direction. That sounds simple, but it has a meaningful practical consequence: you can go from your lowest daylight setting to your highest, or anywhere in between, in a single half-turn motion with your thumb while maintaining your grip.

In the real world, going from bright midday sun to the shade of a structure can happen in a second when you’re moving. The original LCO required multiple clicks to traverse the full illumination range. With the rapid dial, you make one deliberate motion and you’re where you need to be. You don’t have to think about how many clicks it’s going to take. You just dial.

Motion Sensor Technology (MST™): 30,000-Hour Battery Life

Leupold’s Motion Sensor Technology is not new to the product line, but the implementation in the Pro F2 extends average battery life to 30,000 hours. That number needs context: it means roughly 3.4 years of continuous operation, or several decades of regular use. MST activates the optic when it detects movement and puts it into a low-power sleep state when the firearm has been stationary for a set period.

For a carbine that sits in a safe or a vehicle for extended periods between uses — which describes most defensive firearms most of the time — MST means the battery is effectively managing itself. You’re not going to pick up your home defense carbine in an emergency and find the dot dead because you left it on. That’s not a trivial feature for a defensive optic.

Lockout Mode: No Accidental Changes

Lockout mode turns off the Motion Sensor Technology and prevents unintentional setting changes once your preferred illumination has been selected. This is specifically useful in two scenarios: when you’ve got the F2 set up for a night vision run and you don’t want the dial getting bumped during movement, and when you’re in a competition context and you want your settings to stay exactly where you put them between stages. On the Grand Island range, Kyle Lamb specifically mentioned lockout mode in the context of making the optic “more surgical” — when you’ve dialed to exactly the right illumination for your conditions, you want it to stay there.

Four Reticle Options

The Pro F2 offers four selectable reticle configurations, compared to the original LCO’s single 1 MOA dot:

  • 65 MOA Ring with Compass Points and 1 MOA red dot — the most versatile option for dynamic defensive use
  • 65 MOA Ring and 1 MOA Red Dot — classic carbine optic setup, familiar to anyone who has run an EOTech or similar holographic
  • Compass Points and 1 MOA Red Dot — clean, fast, surgical
  • 1 MOA Red Dot only — minimalist, for shooters who want nothing between them and the target

The 65 MOA outer ring is genuinely useful for dynamic defensive work. At close range it gives you a massive reference frame that helps confirm your point of aim when you’re in a stressful present-and-shoot scenario. At distance, you switch your focus to the 1 MOA center dot. Doug Koenig’s preference was for the ring-and-dot combination in competition contexts precisely for this reason — speed up close, precision as needed at distance.

Full Specifications — Leupold LCO Pro F2

Leupold LCO Pro F2 — Complete Specifications
Magnification1x (true-to-life sight picture, open-eyes shooting)
Eye reliefUnlimited
Field of view140 ft @ 100 yards
Length3.5 inches
Sight height1.5 inches (absolute co-witness height)
Weight9.6 oz (including battery)
Illumination20 daylight + 10 night vision settings = 30 total
Reticle options4 selectable: 65 MOA Ring + Compass Points + 1 MOA dot │ 65 MOA Ring + 1 MOA dot │ Compass Points + 1 MOA dot │ 1 MOA dot only
Adjustment range140 MOA elevation │ 140 MOA windage │ Click windage and elevation adjustments
Motion Sensor TechMST™ — extends average battery life to 30,000 hours
Lockout modePrevents accidental setting changes │ Also disables MST when engaged
Illumination dialRapid Illumination Dial — half-turn cycles through all 20 settings in either direction
NV protectionProtected night vision button prevents accidental daylight NV activation
HousingOne-piece machined aircraft-grade US aluminum │ Ultra-rugged
WaterproofTo 66 feet (shockproof, fogproof)
Finish optionsMatte Black │ Flat Dark Earth (FDE)
Part numbersMatte: 187640 (A) │ FDE: 187641 (B)
OriginDesigned, machined, and assembled in the USA
WarrantyLeupold Lifetime Guarantee
MSRP$899.99 (both finishes)
AvailabilityFDE now available at Leupold.com │ Matte ‘Coming Soon’ at time of launch

Let’s Talk About the Glass, Because It Matters

Specs are one thing. The glass is where a red dot earns or loses its reputation over time, and the Leupold LCO line has always had a strong answer to the glass question. The Pro F2 continues that with what Leupold describes as a premium, distortion-free, recessed aspheric lens. The recessed design isn’t just an aesthetic choice — it protects the glass from debris impact and reduces glare that could wash out your reticle in specific lighting conditions.

Chris’s assessment on the range in Grand Island: the picture is genuinely clean. There’s no notable distortion at the edges of the window, the dot doesn’t bleed or bloom in the way that budget optics often do when you crank the brightness, and the wide unobstructed field of view is one of the things that makes the LCO platform feel different from more enclosed red dots. You see around the optic. Your peripheral vision stays in the picture. That matters enormously in the kind of dynamic shooting scenarios the F2 was designed for.

The LCO Pro F2 is built on the same “Punisher” test standard as Leupold’s full product line — 5,000 impacts at three times the recoil force of a .308 Winchester. That’s the standard the optic has to meet before it ships. If it doesn’t pass, it doesn’t go out. The Leupold Lifetime Guarantee backs it after it does.

Who Should Buy the LCO Pro F2?

At $899.99, the Pro F2 is priced at the premium end of the red dot market — below the Aimpoint ACRO P-2 and Steiner MPS at $599-799, competitive with the top Holosun options, and positioned as a direct competitor to the EoTech XPS3-0. Let’s be specific about who this optic is built for, because at $899 you should know exactly what you’re buying and whether it’s the right call for your specific use.

  • Carbine operators who need day and night capability: The 30-setting illumination range with ten dedicated NV levels and the protected NV button makes the F2 one of the more fully developed NV-compatible red dots in this price range. If you’re running NVGs or planning to, this is a serious consideration.
  • Competitive shooters in tactical/carbine divisions: Doug Koenig’s endorsement is not ceremonial. The rapid illumination dial, the four reticle options, and the lockout mode are all features that translate directly to competition usefulness. The 65 MOA ring for close-range speed combined with the 1 MOA precision dot for distance is a genuinely practical reticle for dynamic competition.
  • Law enforcement and military professionals: The LCO has always had a strong professional following and the Pro F2 upgrades every element that matters for professional use. MST battery life, lockout mode, the full NV settings suite, and the Leupold Lifetime Guarantee make this a defensible duty optic at a price point that doesn’t require a department waiver.
  • Serious defensive carbine owners: If you’re putting a red dot on a home defense or truck gun and you want one you will never have to replace or second-guess, the F2’s combination of MST battery management, rugged aluminum housing, and lifetime guarantee makes the $899 price point an investment rather than an expense.

Bottom Line: Leupold Built on What Was Already Great and Made It Better

The original LCO didn’t need a complete redesign. It needed specific, targeted upgrades that people who use it every day had been asking for. More illumination levels, especially for NV. Faster access to those levels without multiple button presses. Better battery management. More reticle choices. And a lockout mode to make sure that once you’ve dialed in your setup, it stays dialed in.

The Pro F2 delivers all of that. It keeps everything that made the original LCO earn its reputation — the machined US aluminum, the premium glass, the lifetime guarantee, the absolute co-witness height, the unlimited eye relief — and adds the upgrades that the field asked for. Having Chris Cerino on the ground in Grand Island with Kyle Lamb and Doug Koenig running the drills gave us something that a press release alone can’t provide: the answer to whether those features work when it matters.

They do. The LCO Pro F2 is available now in FDE at $899.99 from leupold.com, with the matte version coming soon. If you’ve been waiting for Leupold to upgrade the LCO for the modern optics market, the wait is over.

Photos courtesy of Leupold Optics.

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