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ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

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  1. O

    Looking for an 8x32 in the $300 range

    The eyecups are soft rubber with a rounded edge, over a metal twist-up mechanism. At 44.5mm diameter, they're the second-narrowest twist-ups in our product line. People rarely have issues with our 48mm twist-ups. If you don't like twist-ups, just say so- because these are as small and soft...
  2. O

    Looking for an 8x32 in the $300 range

    Like I said, we can repair anything we sell. A good condition $250+ binocular? Sure, repairing would make sense. A 12-year-old sub-$250 binocular? We could, but you'd probably be better off replacing. BTW, repairs are rarely because something wore out, they're almost always due to a hard drop.
  3. O

    Looking for an 8x32 in the $300 range

    Have you seen the post on our site about ROAMER (Ridiculously Over-engineered Accurate Measure of Eye Relief)? That piece of equipment obviously wasn't created to measure eye relief, it's our hinge-pin pusher (now doing double-duty). Why would we invest in something like that if we're not...
  4. O

    Looking for an 8x32 in the $300 range

    The twist-up eyecups on the SE models are 44.5mm in diameter, considerably narrower than our popular CF Deluxe models (48mm) and the 14mm eyepieces included with our XL Series binocular telescopes (also 48mm). Only the 6.5x32LW twist-up eyecups are narrower (41mm) than the SE's.
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