For £80 I'd want something with a less confusing description. "Binoculars" but seems to have one eyepiece? And what does "Electronic viewfinder (EVF mode)" mean?
Mike.
That would make the object lens tiny. It looks as if it is just a phone camera with x3 magnification. It might be a bit better in low light than nothing, but not much I would think.I believe the photo is of non eyepiece end
I believe the photo is of non eyepiece end
that is the opposite end the the ocularFor £80 I'd want something with a less confusing description. "Binoculars" but seems to have one eyepiece? And what does "Electronic viewfinder (EVF mode)" mean?
Mike.
I may take the plunge as a group of sports boat owner friends are keen on doing a night run to poole or lulworth cove from the Hamble
Proposal was to travel in convey at speed which is fraught with dangers in my view.
I'll see if this IR thingy gives enough advance warning of lobster pots other vessels etc.......
I may take the plunge as a group of sports boat owner friends are keen on doing a night run to poole or lulworth cove from the Hamble
Proposal was to travel in convey at speed which is fraught with dangers in my view.
I'll see if this IR thingy gives enough advance warning of lobster pots other vessels etc.......
I had a ' Yukon ' night vision monocular, which while proper 1st generation would seem a lot more serious than the Lidl thing, about £100 some years ago.
Quite useful, but no way on earth any good for travelling at high mobo speeds in the dark.
My monocular packed up after a few months but the supplier had gone bust by then.
I've also tried proper military 4th generation at least nvg's as used in the night vision Harrier GR7 - wonderful kit costing quite a few thousand ( and a short life ) but even with those I wouldn't speed at sea in the dark, the Harrier had a built in Forward Looking Infra Red for flying, the pilots' NVG's were just for peering around.
I suggest a new passage plan !![]()
There's a lot of confusion about night vision, mainly thanks to poorly researched and / or written Hollywood stuff - most people don't get the difference between image intensifiers - as in Night Vision Goggles, green image - ot infra red, usually a black & white image.
Please do not confuse night vision kit which relies on an external (normally IR) illuminator working in conjunction with an image intensifier, with thermal imaging cameras and sights which can discriminate between the temperature of objects and background and display the difference as a recognisable shape.
Travelling in a boat at night and looking for a pot marker would need a powerful IR source and an image intensifier as the pot marker will be at very nearly the same temperature as the sea. However if you wish to follow a lead boat in a convoy, a thermal imaging sight will show up the disturbed water and exhausts.
The range of vision in both is increasing as technology improves. My FLIR thermal sight has a range of about 800m and costs in the shops about £2k.
Definitely...
Isn't it likely that ordinary high-quality binoculars will improve poor-light viewing, better than items like this from Lidl?