Binocollector
Well-known member

Sorry, I thought it was a little unclear - I'm no native speaker.
So an example - Henry stated that a small exit pupil would step down the pupil of the eye, therefore increase its focal length and increase DoF in low light if the eye's pupil is larger than the exit pupil of the bino.
That would mean, a 10x25 would have greater DoF if your eye's pupil was dilated to 4mm compared to a 10x40. That would mean that magnification is not the only factor to determine DoF.
And the post from a German astronomy forum I linked claimed that a bino that delivers more light to the eye, therefore decreasing the entrance pupil of the eye because it contracts, would increase DoF by the same mechanism that Henry described.
Not sure I'm making myself clear.
So an example - Henry stated that a small exit pupil would step down the pupil of the eye, therefore increase its focal length and increase DoF in low light if the eye's pupil is larger than the exit pupil of the bino.
That would mean, a 10x25 would have greater DoF if your eye's pupil was dilated to 4mm compared to a 10x40. That would mean that magnification is not the only factor to determine DoF.
And the post from a German astronomy forum I linked claimed that a bino that delivers more light to the eye, therefore decreasing the entrance pupil of the eye because it contracts, would increase DoF by the same mechanism that Henry described.
Not sure I'm making myself clear.