ltcom
Well-Known Member
I have cheapo ones that are excellent and are better than my 3x more expensive land binos.
IMHO a pair of bins is much more efficient than the naked eye in low light or bad visibility conditions or when trying to confirm the validity of a distant landmark. Bins with a compass speed up the taking of bearings in these cases.Never did understand the desire for bins with a compass built in.
All you're ever likely to get with a mishmash like that is inferior performance from both.
Firstly you do not need the 'accuracy' you might imagine a compass in a binocular might provide. A hand bearing compass is perfectly adequate and it is likely that with much, even any movement of the boat the built-in compass would be hard to read, if readable at all.
I'd strongly suggest you spend as much as you can afford on a decent pair of bins with an objective lens of 40mm utter minimum, no more than 7x mag , plus a half decent hand bearing compass.
The combination is likely to seriously outperform any cobbled-together bundle that's neither fish nor fowl.
Bynolyt Searangers have the reputation for being RNLI issue, and have won some Best Buy awards in yachting magazine reviews in the past, but they're closer to £200 than OP's declared budget of £100. At one time they came up pretty regularly secondhand on eBay for less than £100, but less so recently I think.I have a pair of Bynolits which I find excellent. A charter boat had a fairly cheap pair of bins (cannot remember make) and the compass damping was so poor as to be useless.
I agree. I have borrowed binos with compasses and in a seaway the accuracy is no different to that of a hand-bearing compass. There is one situation where I can see their value. This is when an object's bearing has been established from radar or AIS/GPS and you could use this bearing to search the horizon for the target. This has not occurred often enough for me to tempt me into buying one, thoughNever did understand the desire for bins with a compass built in.
All you're ever likely to get with a mishmash like that is inferior performance from both.
Firstly you do not need the 'accuracy' you might imagine a compass in a binocular might provide. A hand bearing compass is perfectly adequate and it is likely that with much, even any movement of the boat the built-in compass would be hard to read, if readable at all.
I'd strongly suggest you spend as much as you can afford on a decent pair of bins with an objective lens of 40mm utter minimum, no more than 7x mag , plus a half decent hand bearing compass.
The combination is likely to seriously outperform any cobbled-together bundle that's neither fish nor fowl.
I certainly wouldn't consider bins with compass built in as a substitute for a hand-bearing compass, but as a supplement they are useful for those situations where the object you are trying to get a (possibly rough) bearing on is too distant for the naked eye.
Bynolyt Searangers have the reputation for being RNLI issue, but they're closer to £200 than OP's declared budget of £100.
Mind you, I see they now have a 25-year warranty so perhaps worth the price. I like mine, too.
As an old f@rt I actually want more light hitting my retina rather than less, especially at night.if you’re and old f@rt, it’s usually cheaper to buy a 32mm or 40mm pair. You cannot use the 50mm amount of light anyway as your eyes simply are not able to after you age (gracefully). if you’re 20, then go fo the 50mm and rejoice.
+1I've had a pair of Fujinons for years. Can't remember how much I paid, but they didn't break the bank - and my bank is pretty fragile. All I can say is they do exactly what they're supposed to. I have a vague recollection of them being a yottie comic recommendation.
I've got a pair of those too. Very clear image and the compass works very well. Much easier than a hand bearing compass. Mine are also sticky. Did the alcohol work.I have a pair of the heavy rubberised ones that appear in various guises (mine are actually from Aldi about 12years ago) they are OK as simple bins and the bearing ability was very useful, but the compass no longer rotates. Also the rubber grip went sticky and had to be cleaned off with alcohol.