Bino Steve
Well-known member

I'm curious about your thoughts on what constitutes a "good enough" view through an optic device (bino, scope) ? I'm pretty new to optics and most everything I have is 20 plus years and many 50 plus years old. Still great views, still have fun. When does purchasing the latest and greatest become " gear junkie-ism" ? This is an opinion question, no right or wrong. And lets assume that the device focuses nice and works fine mechanically.
I see so much about CA and spikes and clear focus to the edge and vignetting. I understand eye relief issues and I'm taking that out of the discussion. But for edge clarity for example; when you look at something through your binoculars, don't you center it anyway in the view? Do you bail on your cheaper binos and pay thousands to have it sharper to the edge but still center your target in the view? We talk about dim views compared to an Alpha bino. Well , I wear sunglasses to 'dim' my view when I'm outside, it's just too bright. Wouldn't I want some dimming if I'm looking through optics so I'm not blinded? I understand color reproduction issues and that may warrant a bino change, but probably a simple model change or brand change.
But some of these seems silly. Did you see your target or not? Does it not count because it was vignetted around it or slightly off color. Do we not check the target off our list?
Sure. Sure buy what you want, but beware that Mfgs know how to play the game of " its never good enough". They hate that you keep your binoculars 40 years. That doesn't make them money. An analogy, when I was much much younger. I wanted to be a music DJ at a Nightclub. They said. It's not about keeping the patrons dancing, it's about knowing when and how to get them to leave the dance floor, with a bad song or major beat change, so they will go to the bar and spend money on drinks. So. Are these minutiae spec improvements to optics making us "leave the dance floor" to spend? What do you say? No judgements. And to be upfront, i have never looked through any Alpha. My top binos I own are Rangemaster, B&L Custom 8x36 & 10x40 Audubon society, Leupold 10x40 i.f. porro , numerous Sears Discoverers and 804R Swift.
. Spend what you like. But I'm curious about if there is a real "need" for $3,000,4000 US dollar binoculars. If there is, I'll start saving. Thx for your opinions.
I see so much about CA and spikes and clear focus to the edge and vignetting. I understand eye relief issues and I'm taking that out of the discussion. But for edge clarity for example; when you look at something through your binoculars, don't you center it anyway in the view? Do you bail on your cheaper binos and pay thousands to have it sharper to the edge but still center your target in the view? We talk about dim views compared to an Alpha bino. Well , I wear sunglasses to 'dim' my view when I'm outside, it's just too bright. Wouldn't I want some dimming if I'm looking through optics so I'm not blinded? I understand color reproduction issues and that may warrant a bino change, but probably a simple model change or brand change.
But some of these seems silly. Did you see your target or not? Does it not count because it was vignetted around it or slightly off color. Do we not check the target off our list?
Sure. Sure buy what you want, but beware that Mfgs know how to play the game of " its never good enough". They hate that you keep your binoculars 40 years. That doesn't make them money. An analogy, when I was much much younger. I wanted to be a music DJ at a Nightclub. They said. It's not about keeping the patrons dancing, it's about knowing when and how to get them to leave the dance floor, with a bad song or major beat change, so they will go to the bar and spend money on drinks. So. Are these minutiae spec improvements to optics making us "leave the dance floor" to spend? What do you say? No judgements. And to be upfront, i have never looked through any Alpha. My top binos I own are Rangemaster, B&L Custom 8x36 & 10x40 Audubon society, Leupold 10x40 i.f. porro , numerous Sears Discoverers and 804R Swift.
. Spend what you like. But I'm curious about if there is a real "need" for $3,000,4000 US dollar binoculars. If there is, I'll start saving. Thx for your opinions.