Another pair of binoculars, a very popular and fairly common model in its time, but very hard to find in good condition today. Sollux is a lightweight wide angle binocular, sharp and has very well corrected image and neutral colours. Its pre WW II design is noticed by the central position of the focus wheel and uncoated optics. That is why it is not as bright as the best examples with coated optics at that time. Nevertheless, very good brightness for uncoated optics. I believe my example is a post WWII era, from 50' or 60'. It came in a standard brown leather case, with a black leather strap and black leather rain guard. Beautiful instrument.
CLASSIC BINOCULARS
The gallery presents this beautiful optical instruments, their main characteristic and feelings they arouse.
Sunday 11 February 2024
Saturday 14 August 2021
HENSOLDT WETZLAR Diagon 8X30
There seem to be two versions of Diagon's. This one, with smaller ocular lenses and it looks like without any coatings. That's why it is not particularly bright and let's say with average sharpness. However it has wide field of view and quite natural colours. Decent pair of binoculars. Old German school. This type has a serial number under a Diagon 8X30 markings and the other one, probably the newer version has a serial number beside the objective lens and a typical blue coating, visible on the ocular and objective lenses.
Sunday 4 September 2016
SWAROVSKI Habicht 8X30
I finally got it. In a good condition, internally clean,
perfectly collimated for "reasonable" price. Its full name is
Swarovski Habicht-Merkur 8X30 M DV, "Habicht" in script letters, dated in early
60s. I was prepared for only one deliberately chosen "flaw" - yellow image.
Everything else supposed to be mechanical and optical masterpiece. Unfortunately,
Swarovski was not in alpha class with E. Leitz and Carl Zeiss in 50s and 60s, like it
is today. I compared it with both Carl Zeiss, east and west, with Binuxit and
many others, three times cheaper binoculars. Central sharpness is not on par
with let's say Binuxit, Carl Zeiss west, Zephyr, Porlerim and Pizar, brightness is
average, viewing comfort is far from perfect and its greenish yellow tint is
very unpleasant in almost any lighting conditions (among the worst in my collection). Paint on the bridge and
leatherette are also very low quality and prone to fall off. And focus is
pretty stiff due to a kind of weather sealing. As a birdwatcher I would choose
Carl Zeiss Deltrintem pre 1978 over Habicht any time, despite some glorious
reviews. Hard to believe? Take a chance and try it by yourself : )
Second opinion: Greatest binoculars
Second opinion: Greatest binoculars
Sunday 13 March 2016
RO RUHNKE OPTIK Noctovist 8X30
Late Noctovist MkI model with larger ocular lenses than MkII Noctovist, obviously an export model with English markings. It was cca 30% cheaper than Carl Zeiss Deltrintem. It is well built, but optically not even close to best German glass, with the exception of center sharpness. Wide Angle, Fully coated is just a marketing trick. Its field of view is much narrower than competition (130 m / 1000 m) and the view is very yellow, almost orange in colours.
Sunday 5 April 2015
SPINDLER & HOYER Moacht 8X30
Spindler & Hoyer, another great German brand in fine optics and precision engineering with more than 120 years of history. This little and lightweight instrument proved that very well. It's my smallest 8X30 binoculars, even smaller than KERN Pizar 6X24 and weighs only 360 g. Despite the size it surprises with very good optical performance. It's sharp, bright with good contrast and has very neutral colours. Only field of view is a little bit narrower than in best porro "full size" 8X30 binoculars. Still wide enough, especially for today's standards. Definitely does not deserve to be overlooked among the collectors. It was a budget German binocular. And even today you can get one really cheap.
Note: It has some kind of fabric strips on the sliding ocular tubes which fall apart within the years and are hard to replace.
Note: It has some kind of fabric strips on the sliding ocular tubes which fall apart within the years and are hard to replace.
Wednesday 5 November 2014
NIKON 8X30 A
Nikon 8X30 A series (2nd version) is the grandfather of a famous contemporary Nikon 8X30 EII. But I will rather compare it with the last Carl Zeiss 8X30 porro. At a first glance they look very similar, although Nikon is a bit bigger, let's say chunkier, but they weight exactly the same. Also, optically they are pretty close, and Nikon seems marginally brighter than Zeiss. Which surprises me a lot. A big compliment to much cheaper Nikon. Unfortunately, they share the weaknesses, too. Both images have too much yellow tint for my taste. Nikon is very well built, only focus knob is too stiff, but not unusable.
Second opinion: Simon Spiers
Second opinion: Simon Spiers
Tuesday 22 April 2014
CARL ZEISS 8X30 (West)
The 8X30 was the first model from a new Zeiss factory in the West - Oberkochen and was announced in 1954. It was produced along with its eastern brothers Deltrintem / Jenoptem and was sold for a double price. Is it worth it? My opinion is that it is not. For this price the view should have more neutral colours and it should be brighter than its cheaper and older rivals. Otherwise, this is a very good pair of binoculars. Simply disappears before your eyes. The view is very wide and sharp almost to the edge. Its optical construction allowed for short and very compact body, built to a very high standards.
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