New ZR 8x43s
This is my first post, just joined BirdForum.
I have been a keen birder/hiker/wilderness flyfisher for many years, and have owned all sorts of binoculars. Many years ago I had a Zeiss Jena pair, and they are still around but need realignment. In recent years I travel with cheap lightweight Nikon bins.
A year or so ago, I was hiking in the New Zealand ranges, and encountered a couple of deer hunters who were sharing the hut. At their invitation, I accompanied them, near sunset, to view (glass!) some deer they had spotted. These guys had a set of bins in a small box which they handled fairly carefully, while I just slung my Nikons round my neck.
I thought that my Nikons were adequate, but the performance of these hunters’ Leica bins (Trinovid 8x42s, I think) was something else, especially in the lowish light. When I got home and researched them, I understood why they were handling them so carefully.
Naturally I hankered after a set of these, but I baulked at the cost. Hunting (and fishing) has a rather more direct investment/return equation than birding. I largely sublimated these hankerings by the simple expedient of buying my lovely spouse (also a keen birder and hiker) some 10x25 Ultravids for a birthday gift. Great optics, compact, light, robust, these did the business. She loves them, and I get to use them from time to time.
However, the memory of the effect of that 5.25 mm exit pupil remained, and when I decided to look out some decent 8x42s, I stumbled on these debates on the Internet about Chinese optics. At the time of stumbling, the ZR ED2 was newly released, and given the general tenor of the reviews, a punt seemed in order.
Well, these Zen-Ray 8x43 ED2s have definitely been a rewarding acquisition. Very high wow-factor. Good enough for me. I don’t get any of these ghosting crescents unless I adopt a very peculiar viewing position, and can’t get ghosting crescents at all with the eyecups at ¾ extension, just fantastic views.
Binocular durability has been debated in various forums. I don’t intend to throw these binoculars around, nor would I throw around my wife’s Ultravids; I look after my stuff.