tcm
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i thought most binos pretty useless on a moving boat until i got some image stabilised, Canon 10 x 30.
But if your pupils can only dilate to 4mm then you would have seen just as well with 7x30 bins because your eye is only passing the central 4/7ths of the light from the bins anyway ?Just one proviso.
On another bino thread someone said that old gits can only dilate their eyes a little bit, so 7 * 50 would be a waste, 7 * 30 would do the job just as well.
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Not really.
Although 7x30 would give an exit pupil of 30/7 which is 4 point something. You would get less overall light (by a factor of 30 squared/50 squared).
The point of 7x50s is that the eye viewing can accommodate, so that the full light-gathering power is only apparent at lower light levels and is not dazzled in bright light. It may be that old fogeys like me have smaller dilated pupils, but going into the Dovetief channel last year when it was almost dark, with a mixture of lit and unlit buoys, I was extremely grateful for my trusty old 7x50s
Boo2
I have been sailing, in fact full time, for the last 5 years. I must be a Prat or rich idiot, because I do own a pair of Leica binoculars.When one considers the actual use & hard knocks,water - salt & condensation - etc seagoing bino's take, only a previously rich idiot will use something more exotic with a famous name.
7 X 50 seems ideal for a magnification -7- one can hold still, and max' normal light gathering - 50-.
I find an inbuilt compass invaluable, then I'm the sort of dinosaur who values hand bearing fixes to keep in touch should the GPS fail and for crew training.
When I worked at a chandlery briefly we were selling completely functional Tasco binoculars, when a total prat came in, " 'aven't you got any quality, Leica's ? "
My reply was he clearly hadn't been sailing...
When I worked at a chandlery briefly we were selling completely functional Tasco binoculars, when a total prat came in, " 'aven't you got any quality, Leica's ? "
My reply was he clearly hadn't been sailing...
Currently have Fujinon 7x50 with compass but the old eyes, ya know...
That doesn't make sense to me. I would have thought that if the binoculars are getting more light to your eyes then you will get a better image however much your eyes are dilated.
I'm happy to be shown to be wrong......![]()
It is true that the more light that binoculars pass, the brighter the image, though the magnification will affect this. However, in normal use on a bright day, the image from 7x50s is too bright for comfort and the pupils will contract just as in non-binocular use and the image may appear less bright than a pair of 8x40s.
If you compare the two at dusk, then only with the 7x50s can the eyes get more light by dilating, when light from the full aperture of 50mm becomes available.
You have be young to get enough dilation to have a 7mm diameter pupil (The exit pupil size of 7X50), but the larger exit pupil size allows for some misalignment and 7X50 is a good choice on board a yacht where the size and weight of binoculars is not a great problem.
Could a pair of 7 * 40 be a better compromise for the old boy seeking a more compact, general use pair? What do you think?
Could a pair of 7 * 40 be a better compromise for the old boy seeking a more compact, general use pair? What do you think?
I bought myself a set of the Canon image stabilised . Not the answer to a maidens prayer but a definite advantage over non stabilised. The image difference is between being able to read a big ship name and not doing so, ditto buoy topmarks, buoy names and the ubiquitous " is that big bugger anchored or under weigh?" And the other advantage is that they make using a higher magnification practical - so mine are 10x not 7x.
That said they do not iron out all boat movement by any means.
No compass of course but then I prefer the Personal compass for Autohelm.
I suppose the acid test is would I buy the same again and the answer is yes. Though I might go a bit more up the price bracket for even more stabilisation. Bought at SBS - the something camera company. London I think.