yarrellii
Well-known member
Throw in your questions! And your answers!
Over the last weeks I’ve started using IS binoculars and I’m discovering things I’ve read about but also encountering things I didn’t know or just hadn’t stop to think about. Ok, so IS binoculars are binoculars (Nobel prize speaking here), and are supposed to work more or less like any other binoculars: light goes through a series of lenses and prisms and it's magnified before getting to your eyes. However, I think they have some quirks or considerations that many times remain unknown for people who have never used them. All in all I think IS binoculars are not very popular or well known amongst the general public (and birders seem no exception). Maybe I’m speaking just for myself, but my feeling is that there are many doubts and aspects about IS binoculars that remain unanswered.
So I’m opening this thread with the idea of making it a cooperative/joint effort to clear the doubts that many people who have never used IS binoculars might have. Since I have near to 0 experience in the subject, I'm just the one to set the ball rolling, but I hope that seasoned IS users can give their insights, opinions and experience to answer the many questions that people who have never used IS binoculars might have.
Here are some questions that came to my mind, but please don’t be shy and add your doubts and questions, even if they may seem simplistic or daft (you never know who might share your doubts). Hopefully we can gather in a single thread a wealth of knowledge about IS binoculars in order to help other forum members.
... (your questions here) (and your answers too, please!)
As a background, here are other threads regarding IS binoculars on BirdForum:
Is IS for the Birds?
IS binoculars or scope for higher magnification
Canon IS Binoculars
Durability of Canon IS binoculars
IS binoculars, the battery issue
Over the last weeks I’ve started using IS binoculars and I’m discovering things I’ve read about but also encountering things I didn’t know or just hadn’t stop to think about. Ok, so IS binoculars are binoculars (Nobel prize speaking here), and are supposed to work more or less like any other binoculars: light goes through a series of lenses and prisms and it's magnified before getting to your eyes. However, I think they have some quirks or considerations that many times remain unknown for people who have never used them. All in all I think IS binoculars are not very popular or well known amongst the general public (and birders seem no exception). Maybe I’m speaking just for myself, but my feeling is that there are many doubts and aspects about IS binoculars that remain unanswered.
So I’m opening this thread with the idea of making it a cooperative/joint effort to clear the doubts that many people who have never used IS binoculars might have. Since I have near to 0 experience in the subject, I'm just the one to set the ball rolling, but I hope that seasoned IS users can give their insights, opinions and experience to answer the many questions that people who have never used IS binoculars might have.
Here are some questions that came to my mind, but please don’t be shy and add your doubts and questions, even if they may seem simplistic or daft (you never know who might share your doubts). Hopefully we can gather in a single thread a wealth of knowledge about IS binoculars in order to help other forum members.
- How long do batteries last?
- Can you use rechargeable batteries? And if so, does it make any difference?
- Do IS-binoculars suffer from a loss in image quality when IS is on? (compared to when it’s not)
- Do IS binoculars always suffer from strange artifacts on the image?
- Can you pan with IS on? (like when following a bird in flight)
- Does IS improve low-light performance? (like the capacity to see detail at dusk)
- What’s the response time of IS once you press the button?
- In some IS models you have to keep pressing the IS button 100 % of the time in order for it to work, does this pose a stress on the mechanics and make it more prone to failure?
- Does it make any difference to store your IS binoculars laying flat or standing?
- Is there any further maintenance to be done besides conventional cleaning of the lenses?
- Since most IS binoculars have no central hinge and the main optical train is hidden in a box, are IS binoculars less likely to get out of collimation/alignment if knocked?
- Are there wide angle IS binoculars or do they generally have a modest FOV?
- What’s the lightest/most compact IS?
- What's the highest IS magnification to be hand-holdable?
- Are there noticeable differences in the IS technology used? The same way, for example, that a user might experience a difference in depth and 3-D effect when using Porros or roofs.
- What’s the “life expectancy” of IS binoculars? Do they last as long as quality conventional binoculars?
... (your questions here) (and your answers too, please!)
As a background, here are other threads regarding IS binoculars on BirdForum:
Is IS for the Birds?
IS binoculars or scope for higher magnification
Canon IS Binoculars
Durability of Canon IS binoculars
IS binoculars, the battery issue