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KennyJ
   
Reged: 04/27/03
Posts: 10163
Loc: Lancashire UK
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Wouldn't it be nice -- or at least "handy" , to have easily interchangeble , perfectly matched , parfocal eyepieces available for all our favourite binoculars ?
To be able to just "pop out" and "pop -in" a couple of eyepieces and within seconds, for example, transform one's 7 x 42 to 10 x 42 , 10 x 50 to 15 x 50 ,15 x 70 to 20 x 70 would not only be wonderful and interesting , it would probably save some of us a fair amount of money in the long term !
Just a thought !
Kenny
-------------------- If everyone is thinking the same thing , no-one is thinking - General George S.Patton
Zeiss 7 x 42 BGAT
Captain's Helmsman 7 x 50
Nikon 10 x 42 Superior E
Swift Audubon Kestrel 10 x 50
Helios 15 x 70 Observation
Strathspey 20 x 90
Televue 76 APO
Zeiss 85 Diascope
Helios 102 f5 refractor
Various eyepieces barlows tripods mounts etc.
Panasonic Lumix DMC - TZ5 digital camera
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Sooon
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 08/19/04
Posts: 1036
Loc: Lausanne, Switzerland
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The idea looks very good, but I fear the fancy priced EP addiction and then even more money spent .
Clear skies
-------------------- Philippe
Tele Vue 102 / Losmandy GM8
Tele Vue 76 / Tele Vue Panoramic
Meade ETX 90
Coronado PST
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Erik D
Carpal Tunnel
   
Reged: 04/28/03
Posts: 2574
Loc: Central New Jersey, USA
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I like the idea of having the flexibility of ~16, 20, 32X & 50X interchangeable EPs for MOUNTED astro binoculars. I don't think I'd want to keep track of several pairs of pop in, pop out EPs while I am in the field. I have a tough time making sure my lens covers don't get dropped.
I think the Leica Duovid is a better solution for those who are wiling to pay the extra $$$$. For me getting an another pair of mid priced bino works out just fine. I intend to pair my 26 oz 12X50 roof prism with a pair of 10 oz 8X25 pocket binos when I go on my next overseas trip.
Erik D
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Alan French
Night Owl
   
Reged: 01/28/05
Posts: 1484
Loc: Upstate NY
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I too think something like the Duovid is a better approach. I tend to stick with one eyepiece when I am in the field with my spotting scope, and I can not picture myself changing two eyepieces in my binoculars.
In recent years we have also seen some fine zooms for spotting scopes - so perhaps we will one day see some quality zoom binoculars.
Interchangeable eyepieces for large, mounted astro binoculars, definitely get my vote, however.
Clear skies, Alan
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Swedpat
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 02/18/05
Posts: 1033
Loc: Boden, Sweden, Scandinavia
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Instead of bad zooms I think it's a great idea. If the interchangeble eyepieces would have the same "screw lock" function as for example Swarovski spottingscopes, it could even be waterproof.
-------------------- *2,3x40 Constellation View Wide-Bino
*Leupold 6x30 Yosemite
*Leupold Katmai 6x32
*Swarovski SLCNew 7x42B
*Bresser (Lidl) 10x50
*Oberwerk 11x70
*No name (Kunming) 15x70
*Scopos ED APO 66
*Meade 5000 26mm Plössl, Vixen LV 10/5mm
Psalm 19:2
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KennyJ
   
Reged: 04/27/03
Posts: 10163
Loc: Lancashire UK
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Zoom binoculars have around for long enough , but can anyone tell me about a REALLY good one ?
I haven't seen one yet.
I also find the price of the Leica Duovid is somewhat restrictive.
If two perfectly paired eye pieces can be included in the price of perfectly reasonable £100 binoculars , not to mention the cheaper models, then I see no reason why they necessarily ought to be an expensive option.
I don't PARTICULARLY like having to change eyepieces , but if I must do it , I'd rather do it in daylight than fumbling around in the dark and cold ,like thousands of people do with telescopes.
Just my opinion of course :-)
Kenny
-------------------- If everyone is thinking the same thing , no-one is thinking - General George S.Patton
Zeiss 7 x 42 BGAT
Captain's Helmsman 7 x 50
Nikon 10 x 42 Superior E
Swift Audubon Kestrel 10 x 50
Helios 15 x 70 Observation
Strathspey 20 x 90
Televue 76 APO
Zeiss 85 Diascope
Helios 102 f5 refractor
Various eyepieces barlows tripods mounts etc.
Panasonic Lumix DMC - TZ5 digital camera
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sftonkin
sage
   
Reged: 02/25/04
Posts: 395
Loc: Kent, UK
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I'm not sure how much I'd use the facility. My big bins have x37 and x20 eyepieces, but I hardly ever swap in the x20s (it must be at least 6 months since I last did it). Similarly, my favourite handhelds are 10x42; I don't recall ever wanting less magnification from them, and more would negate the hand-hold-ability.
-------------------- Stephen
Hindsight: The only truly diffraction-limited system
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Rich N
Post Laureate
   
Reged: 09/22/04
Posts: 5314
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, Calif...
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Hi Kenny,
It would be nice. We do it with our telescopes.
I don't think the eyepieces need to be perfectly matched. Our eyes aren't always perfectly matched and your brain can figure out the image. Most of the better 1 1/4" telescope eyepieces are closely enough matched to work just fine in my binoviewer.
One would hope the optics of the binocular would be good enough to support the higher powers.
Clear skies, Rich
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milt
sage
   
Reged: 09/13/04
Posts: 430
Loc: Arizona
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Hello Alan,
I have to chuckle when I see "newbie" under your name. Readers should know that nothing could be farther from the truth. You are a welcome additon to a good forum with reliable advice available from folks like Ed, Erik and Kenny.
You guys floated a name I didn't recognize - the Leica Duovid. I looked up the Leica URL for others who may be in the dark:
http://www.leica-camera.com/sportoptik/produkte/duo/index_e.html
Leica's is an elegant alternative to the very thorny problem of changing eyepieces in a waterproof binocular. I didn't look up the price, which is probably just as well.
Even in mono scopes I change eyepieces less than I used to. Getting old and lazy, I guess. But I agree with Kenny that it is nice to have the ability, particularly when you can share eyepieces across a wide range of instruments. Having different sets of proprietary ep's for every binocular would get expensive in a hurry.
For me, the sweet spot for mounted big bino's has turned out to be in the 30x-40x range with ~2 degrees FOV. Any less magnification and you are really wasting 70-100mm objectives. My opinion, of course.
Good to "talk" to you again, Milt
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brocknroller
Carpal Tunnel
   
Reged: 10/16/03
Posts: 1517
Loc: Liberal, Kansas
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Quote:
Zoom binoculars have around for long enough , but can anyone tell me about a REALLY good one ?
I haven't seen one yet.
Kenny,
Have you tried a NIkon 8-16X40 XL Zoom? It's the best zoom binocular I've tried, larger FOV than most zooms (5.2*), exceptionally sharp to the edge (nearly on par with the Nikon 10X42 SE at 10X, on par at 12X), lightweight, pebbly vinyl old style body, but surprisingly easy to hold steady. I can hold it about as steady at 16X as I could the Nikon 12X50 EX, which was heavier and not as well balanced, though more ergonomic.
There are two design flaws, one inherent to all zoom lenses, be they EPs or bins, the AFOV is narrower at low power than at high. IOW, you get more tunnel view at 8X than at 16X. The other is a pecularlity to THIS zoom -- overlapping barrel shadows from 20ft-30ft. I see these shadows at close focus in all my porros that focus closer than 15 ft. since the width of the barrels is wider than the width of my eyes, but to see this over a range of 10 ft. is a puzzle. I've talked with other XL Zoom owners, and they've seen the same thing. I called Nikon recently and twisted the arm of a technical support person to ask a binocular technician about this (last time I talked with the support person, who I later found out was NOT a technician), and he wrote me an email saying that although zooms are "finicky", the XL should not show any overlapping shadows at close focus. So back they go to Nikon ($17.50) for repairs. If they can fix the problem this time, they will move up on my list of my most favorite bins.
For stargazing, the views are tack sharp nearly to the edge. There is no eyestrain at any distance, from 20ft to infinity, so if it is a miscollimation problem, it's something peculair to zooms since I know if a bin is miscollimated as soon as I hold it up to my eyes (or in some cases, when I pull it away from my eyes and feel my eyes strain to refocus). But not with these.
The other thing I mentioned elsewhere is the need to refocus at different powers when you zoom in, so that's makes them a bit "finicky", but you'd have to do this if you used different power bins. Zooming out does not require refocusing, so that's a plus.
The XL Zooms have premium optics unlike most zooms, which have some of the worst binocular optics I've seen, hence the bad rep that zoom bins have gotten. But on this one, Nikon "almost" got it all right, and if they can eliminate the close focus shadows, they'd be equally good for birding and stargazing. Very good reviews by outdoors writers and XL owners (check excelsis.com).
As great as the Duovids must be, I could never hold a roof that narrow steady, and the eyecups look like the Pentax PCF V bullet-head eyecups, which I don't like. They also cost twice as much as the zooms. The dual power design would be very appealing to me if they applied it to a porro, imagine a 8.5X,12X44 SE!
Brock
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Swedpat
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 02/18/05
Posts: 1033
Loc: Boden, Sweden, Scandinavia
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When we are talking about zoom binos, have you seen the worsed example: 20-100x70! The same manufacturer of Oberwerk has this one...I can just imagine the extremely high grade of CA you will have with the highest power, and likely bad sharpness, for CA use to became on a disturbing level already with 30-40 times power with a pair of achromatic binoculars.
http://www.binocularschina.com/binoculars/zoom70mmspec.html
-------------------- *2,3x40 Constellation View Wide-Bino
*Leupold 6x30 Yosemite
*Leupold Katmai 6x32
*Swarovski SLCNew 7x42B
*Bresser (Lidl) 10x50
*Oberwerk 11x70
*No name (Kunming) 15x70
*Scopos ED APO 66
*Meade 5000 26mm Plössl, Vixen LV 10/5mm
Psalm 19:2
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KennyJ
   
Reged: 04/27/03
Posts: 10163
Loc: Lancashire UK
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< When we are talking about zoom binos, have you seen the worsed example: 20-100x70! >
Patric,
THESE are even worse !
COMPACT ZOOM MODELS :
Sunagor 15 - 70 x 27 "Maxima" Mini Zoom Binoculars Sunagor 18 - 100 x 30 "Compact" Super Zoom Binoculars FULL SIZE ZOOM MODELS : Sunagor 20 - 100 x 50 "MegaZoom" ZCF Binoculars. Sunagor 25 - 150 x 70 BCF "Mega Zoom 150" Binoculars
Regards , Kenny
-------------------- If everyone is thinking the same thing , no-one is thinking - General George S.Patton
Zeiss 7 x 42 BGAT
Captain's Helmsman 7 x 50
Nikon 10 x 42 Superior E
Swift Audubon Kestrel 10 x 50
Helios 15 x 70 Observation
Strathspey 20 x 90
Televue 76 APO
Zeiss 85 Diascope
Helios 102 f5 refractor
Various eyepieces barlows tripods mounts etc.
Panasonic Lumix DMC - TZ5 digital camera
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Swedpat
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 02/18/05
Posts: 1033
Loc: Boden, Sweden, Scandinavia
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Kenny!
I really fall silent...100x with 30mm, 150x with 70mm... Have your tried them? Talk about close up pictures, define the rings of Saturn with a pair of binoculars! Where can I by them?
-------------------- *2,3x40 Constellation View Wide-Bino
*Leupold 6x30 Yosemite
*Leupold Katmai 6x32
*Swarovski SLCNew 7x42B
*Bresser (Lidl) 10x50
*Oberwerk 11x70
*No name (Kunming) 15x70
*Scopos ED APO 66
*Meade 5000 26mm Plössl, Vixen LV 10/5mm
Psalm 19:2
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Erik D
Carpal Tunnel
   
Reged: 04/28/03
Posts: 2574
Loc: Central New Jersey, USA
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My friend has the 12-36X70 Oberwer zoom. Other than the narrow FOV at low power his pair was useable up to 25-28X before resolution break down.
Erik D
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KennyJ
   
Reged: 04/27/03
Posts: 10163
Loc: Lancashire UK
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Going back to Brock's praise for the Nikon 8 - 16 x 40 XL zoom , it IS a model which at least seems to be designed to operate between "realistic" magnifications / objective size ratios.
It is currently on offer for £99 in the UK from warehouse express , which seems a very reasonable price.
It makes me wonder why there aren't more zoom binoculars made available in the 7 -15x power and 40 -50mm range rather than the totally ridiculous specs. as highlighted in my previous post.
Kenny
-------------------- If everyone is thinking the same thing , no-one is thinking - General George S.Patton
Zeiss 7 x 42 BGAT
Captain's Helmsman 7 x 50
Nikon 10 x 42 Superior E
Swift Audubon Kestrel 10 x 50
Helios 15 x 70 Observation
Strathspey 20 x 90
Televue 76 APO
Zeiss 85 Diascope
Helios 102 f5 refractor
Various eyepieces barlows tripods mounts etc.
Panasonic Lumix DMC - TZ5 digital camera
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