I've got one of each, and my experience is, I'll take the Paraclipse system over the Birdview system. Any Day. The Paraclipse has so much more movement than the Birdview...from my location I can see all the way down to 43w with either dish, BUT, the Paraclipse still has more to give should I want to go farther, but by the time the Birdview gets to 43 its getting dangerously close to running out. I can run the Paraclipse danged near into the ground, and the top of my dish mast is 5 feet OFF the ground.
Now, the Birdview system is MUCH more robust, IMO, than the Paraclipse system, the Paraclipse has a chain and idler sprockets which will wear over time, the Birdview has a steel gear with a steel worm, you're not going to wear that out in any of our lifetimes.
I'd take you some pics of the Paraclipse system, but they way its made you cannot see the sprokets and such without completely disassembling the entire system. Which I ain't going to do...LOL....
As far as accuracy, the Paraclipse is much more accurate than the Birdview, but my Birdview has the 37:1 gearbox, so it really hauls ass. Really too fast. The Birdview is hard to get exactly on a satellite with the manual positioner I use, I don't know HOW a programmable mover would work with either, as I don't have one. But IIRC the Paraclipse has a 135:1 box I think....
