Nikon Binoculars 10×50
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![]() Nikon 10x50 Action VII Factory Renewed Binocular US $68.77
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![]() NIKON Action 10x50 65° BINOCULARS with Carry Case US $70.00
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![]() Nikon Action 10x50 Binocular US $109.99
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![]() Nikon Action 10x50mm 65° Binoculars in Case Pre Owned US $42.99
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![]() Binocular Solar Filters 275P fits Canon 18X50 IS and Nikon Action 10 X 50 US $139.00
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![]() Nikon 7218 10x50 Action VII Binoculars US $84.99
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![]() Tasco Zip Focus 10 x 50 Binoculars Leupold Nikon Bushnell US $25.00
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![]() Nikon Action 10x50 65° binocular US $85.00
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![]() Nikon Action VII 10x50 Waterproof Realtree APG Camo Binoculars 7257 US $149.99
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![]() Celestron 71321 Nature 10x50 Porro Binoculars Black US $59.95
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![]() Nikon Sky Earth Kestrel 10 X 50 Binoculars US $115.00
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![]() NIKON 10X50 TRAILBLAZER ATB BINOCULARS 8221 NEW NO RESERVE AUCTION 99 US $69.50
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![]() Nikon Action Extreme all Terrain Binocular 10x50 7245NEW US $192.95
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![]() Nikon 10x50 Action Binocular US $96.95
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![]() NIKON ACTION 10x50 BINOCULAR HIGH POWER 10x CLOSER HUNTING 7269 OUTDOORS US $81.00
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![]() NEW NIKON 8221 TRAILBLAZER 10 X 50MM BINOCULARS US $187.00
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![]() Nikon Action 10x50 Wide Angle 7218 Binocular NEW US $109.95
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Nikon 7072 Lens Pen Cleaning System
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Bushnell Falcon 10x50 Wide Angle Binoculars (Black)
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Bushnell PowerView 20x50 Super High-Powered Surveillance Binoculars
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Nikon Action Binoculars
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Binoculars zoom lenses?
Everybody is saying don't get zoom binoculars, but what if you want to zoom your binocular in and out of an object that's probably too close or far away? I'm planning to purchase the nikon traiblazer 10X50, but I'm afraid if there's no zoom, it will serve no justice. This is my first time purchasing a binocular, and I've been doing alot of research but everything is sill a little unclear? I'm using it for star gazing, bird watching etc.. Is 10X50 good enough even-though there's no zoom? Also, it has a 292 ft wide FOV.. Is this good enough? I read that the wider the view, the more distortion it will probably have.
A 10x50 is as good as you can get for normal binoculars.
You can get astro binoculars much bigger but they are no good without a proper mount and they are uncomfortable to use on normal tripods because they are much shorter than telescopes and the tripod head just gets in the way at high elevations, so you get a binocular mount which is expensive to buy, or you make one.
Here are some typical parallelogram ones for astronomy.
Sitting down time. Don't faint.
http://www.bigbinoculars.com/pmounts.htm . . . .
10x50s are much more practical and will give you great views of the sky and they are excellent for birdwatching. They do quite well when it's dusk, when a lot of birders are looking out for birds flying home or getting settled for the night.
Here's the stuff about image brightness by day or night, magnification,etc. see the list of myths on the right. Coatings are very good these days so the argument against them in the link really is out of date, but all the other myths are explained very well.
http://www.birdwatching.com/optics/myths2006-9.html . . . . .
This is a very good site for explaining everything in a simple but accurate manner...everything you need to know
http://www.aoe.com.au/binocular_guide.html . . . . .
Finally, before spending loads on those Nikons, have a look at some Helios 10x50 for half the price and see if you can find any difference in the quality of the images.
We all see with our own eyes.
However good the sound from a loudspeaker is if you're hearing is bad the speakers just won't sound their best to you. Obvious.
It's the same with binoculars. Leitz and Swarovski may give brilliant sharpness but can you see it?
At 10x you'll have a job seeing anything like as good as the image is in the finest binoculars because the level of sharpness is greater than the eye can see.
The lenses are that good.
One benefit you get with nearly all the top ones is a flatter field right out to the edge, but we don't see the whole field at once anyway. We can't see 50-60 degrees wide as most binocular fields are and see it all sharp at the same time whether we're looking straight out of our eyes or through a telescope or binoculars. The eye wanders round the field to see all there is, with or without using binoculars.
Try it.
Look at the wallpaper or the view from the window and actually notice how much of it is sharp when you stare straight in front of you. We see it all sharp when we're not conscious of our eyes' workings because our eyes are wandering all over the place.. When we see something interesting towards the side of our vision we turn to look at it better, to get a sharp view.
It's the same when you look through an eyepiece. Your eye wanders over the field, not seeing it all sharp at the same time though we get a general impression of sharpness or curvature in the whole field.
Tiny changes of focus are all you need to compensate for a curved field in most cases and it becomes automatic with one finger on the focusing wheel anyway, so save the money.
Mostly we just move the binos a bit to centalise the bit of something interesting we noticed towards the edge of the field, just as we turn our heads to see things more sharply in day to day looking at things.
You pay a lot of money for that extra sharpness and flat field......
Many cheaper binoculars are not far behind in practice, and some of them are just as good for practical use as the top drawer stuff costing hundreds of dollars or pounds, that you'll leave behind more often than not for fear of spoiling them.
I have Helios 7x50 and 10x50, a Meade 15x70, a 20x80,and several other Binos.
Helios 10x50 are the ones I take out with me most times.
Helios binoculars also regularly get "Best Buy" in binocular reviews for astronomy and birdwatching.
Scroll down for some decent 10x50s at a good price.
http://www.firstlightoptics.com/products.php?cat=104 . . . . .
Zoom binoculars are just no good for decent viewing.
The image you get won't be anywhere near as good as in those Nikon binos or the Helios or even much cheaper ones.
Basically, zoom binoculars are crap, unless you want a show-off ornament to boast about.
Better to buy some proper binos and you'll get much more use out of them.
You'll soon get fed up with the zoom efforts and get sick of the field narrowing as you zoom in and images that let you actually see more at lower powers because the images at the high end of the zoom are so poor..
10x50s reign supreme for practical binoculars that cover a lot of uses, and good ones needn't cost a fortune.
Have fun looking.
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US $68.77























