These were one of Nikon's budget lines from 15-20 years ago, not related to the EII in construction or optics. The "Stay Focus" feature was just a focus lock which allowed the binocular to be set for a desired viewing distance, like at a sports event, then locked in that position. Essentially it was a gimmick addressed to the "permafocus" binocular market. The 7x35 has a very short eye relief spec of 9mm. I haven't seen a pair in so long I couldn't say how good the optics really are, but I think they're likely to be just as good or better than the current Actions.
Just a comment here.
Nikon has incorporated a "focus lock" into their new EDG. (At least on the discontinued North American model with the 2 hinges.)
The Focus wheel has 3 positions. Pushed all the way in it is in it's normal functional mode. Pulled out one position and it is in the "focus lock" mode and the focus wheel spins freely. You pull it out to position 3 to set the diopter.
Bob
Hah! I never noticed that (or read the manual). I just tried it on my EDGs and I see what you mean.
So the "pop-out focus wheel so it won't focus" bug complained about in a couple of reviews is really an unexplained feature![]()
Nikon said:Position Ⅰ : Pushed into the deepest (Focusing) position. Focusing ring can be used.
Position Ⅱ : Middle click (Unlocked) position (when the focusing ring is pulled out one step). Focus-lock status is established. Focusing ring rotates freely.
Position Ⅲ : Fully pulled-out (Diopter adjustment) position (focusing ring is pulled out two steps). Focusing ring rotates freely. Diopter adjustment ring becomes operable.
Well, had you read the instruction manual that came with your EDG, you would already know about the focus lock:
But whether or not the unintentioned pop-out of the focus wheel is a feature is still up to debate.
I probably should've used a smiley to emphasize my tongue-in-cheekness. I don't believe the unprompted pop-up of the focus wheel is a feature.
It hasn't unintentionally popped out for me.
Bob
hello...^_^
anyone can tell me anything about Nikon 7x35 CF "StayFocus" ? physically, it looks like Nikon EII....|<|
and, how good are they compared to Action 7x35?
many thanks before for your kind help...:-O
Galih
in StayFocus era, what is the high end line of Nikon binocular?
best regards
Galih
My Nikon catalogue from the early 90's shows a motley collection of top of the line Nikon binoculars contemporary with the Stay-Focus Plus series. They were collectively called the "Criterion Series" in the US. The models included the E Series Porros, 7x35, 8x30 and 10x35; Execulite Roofs, 8x32 and 10x40 and Classic Eagle 8x40 (none of the roofs were phase-corrected); two high quality zoom binoculars, 6-12x24 Letour (roof) and 8-16x40 Zoom XL (Porro); and the 7x50 Prostar and 10x70 Astroluxe.
Dennis is resorting to his usual hyperbole. I remember enough to say that the the "stay-focus" 7x35's were not junk. They were also pretty cheap, less than $100, so a used pair shouldn't cost very much.
Henry