William Lewis
Wishing birdwatching paid the bills.

Hi All.
Me and the family just got back from a very nice day out at global birdfair up in Rutland UK.
All the major optical companies were there that work in the UK with there wares so it was a good chance to look through all the latest and greatest. The bto had a ringing stand which was probably the highlight for me and the wife and kids, must join up to give them a hand!
Optics wise I was looking to see if there was anything to replace my venerable habicht 7x42's so had a bit of a shortlist of contenders to have a look at. As they were pretty much all together I though it would be enlightening to give them a glance, you can more or less back to back them in exactly the same conditions although obviously this will play to some of there strengths more than others! I'm layman but these are the ones I particularly wanted to try and what I thought.
Leica 7x42 ultravid hd - schmidt pechan prisms let's them down, not very sparkly, otherwise good.
Swarovski nl pure 8x42 - best Schmidt pechan I've looked through, almost up there with porro or abbe Koenig, the 8x42 seemed the best of the NL's.
Swarovski SLC hd 8x56. Abbe Koenig prisms- Proper nice, really bright, clear, decent fov. The only really wow non i.s bin I looked through.
There were many more i had a glance through but the family were not too impressed - although they kind of knew what they were in for!
The binocular that really stood out for me other than the SLC though was a totally new one to me. Kite apc 16 X 42. What an amazing bit of kit. I looked throught the cannon i.s range including the 10x42 is L and wasn't impressed - the ergonomics are terrible but the kites showed this does not have to be the case.
Good eye cups (unlike the cannons). Light (760g without batteries) and really well designed, Japanese made to.
Little things stood out like them automatically turning off when pointed straight down, then turning straight back on when moved towards horizontal to save battery life.
Talking of battery life - they have loads of it but the design (reverse porro from appearances) has 2 battery compartments, one on either side, one has the live batteries in, one carries the spares.
The focuser is near the objectives- which helps as stability is enhanced when holding there anyway but it's not uncomfortable as due to the width being the same as conventional binoculars due to having battery compartments either side they just fall nicely to hand.
I.s angular range is greater than most, much more than cannons, 30 year optics warranty, 2 year electrics. Fully nitrogen purges and immersion waterproof, I believe it's 1m for 30 minute.
Some CA but not too much, 2.6mm exit pupil (more than a 75mm scope at 30x) so wouldn't be amazing in low light. 68m at 1000m fov so also not amazing.
I.s just lets you see so much more though, price £1099.
Bargain.
Haven't decided yet, SLC or kite, who'd have thought it although kite may have to be an addition instead of a replacement!
Me and the family just got back from a very nice day out at global birdfair up in Rutland UK.
All the major optical companies were there that work in the UK with there wares so it was a good chance to look through all the latest and greatest. The bto had a ringing stand which was probably the highlight for me and the wife and kids, must join up to give them a hand!
Optics wise I was looking to see if there was anything to replace my venerable habicht 7x42's so had a bit of a shortlist of contenders to have a look at. As they were pretty much all together I though it would be enlightening to give them a glance, you can more or less back to back them in exactly the same conditions although obviously this will play to some of there strengths more than others! I'm layman but these are the ones I particularly wanted to try and what I thought.
Leica 7x42 ultravid hd - schmidt pechan prisms let's them down, not very sparkly, otherwise good.
Swarovski nl pure 8x42 - best Schmidt pechan I've looked through, almost up there with porro or abbe Koenig, the 8x42 seemed the best of the NL's.
Swarovski SLC hd 8x56. Abbe Koenig prisms- Proper nice, really bright, clear, decent fov. The only really wow non i.s bin I looked through.
There were many more i had a glance through but the family were not too impressed - although they kind of knew what they were in for!
The binocular that really stood out for me other than the SLC though was a totally new one to me. Kite apc 16 X 42. What an amazing bit of kit. I looked throught the cannon i.s range including the 10x42 is L and wasn't impressed - the ergonomics are terrible but the kites showed this does not have to be the case.
Good eye cups (unlike the cannons). Light (760g without batteries) and really well designed, Japanese made to.
Little things stood out like them automatically turning off when pointed straight down, then turning straight back on when moved towards horizontal to save battery life.
Talking of battery life - they have loads of it but the design (reverse porro from appearances) has 2 battery compartments, one on either side, one has the live batteries in, one carries the spares.
The focuser is near the objectives- which helps as stability is enhanced when holding there anyway but it's not uncomfortable as due to the width being the same as conventional binoculars due to having battery compartments either side they just fall nicely to hand.
I.s angular range is greater than most, much more than cannons, 30 year optics warranty, 2 year electrics. Fully nitrogen purges and immersion waterproof, I believe it's 1m for 30 minute.
Some CA but not too much, 2.6mm exit pupil (more than a 75mm scope at 30x) so wouldn't be amazing in low light. 68m at 1000m fov so also not amazing.
I.s just lets you see so much more though, price £1099.
Bargain.
Haven't decided yet, SLC or kite, who'd have thought it although kite may have to be an addition instead of a replacement!
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