iseegeorgesstar
Well-known member
Hello,
I recently came across a 20+ year old zeiss 8x20b pocket binocular. And the person who owned them was telling me their story of how they were received/recommended from a person working in an opera house. And while I've never used pocket bins at a show (as I don't really attend them). I couldn't help but comment that I think 8x magnification and whatever the fov is were respectively too much and too narrow for such an endeavor.
And I was reminded of a pocket bin I saw recently online that seemed likely more up to the task -- never tried it -- such as the Eschenbach 4x18
And so, my question to the community is what's a good pocket bin for opera and shows? Is it context dependent such as where you're sitting or is there more a universally accepted standard for what's used?
Regarding the zeiss 8x20b I liked how dimuitive they are. They're at least 1/3rd the width of the nikon 8x20 hgl. The eyecups on the zeiss seemed good enough (not restricting), the nikons are good as well. I found the zeiss rather dim though but I only tried them indoors. Also the focusing felt "sloppy" or slow. Not sure how to describe it. They could come to focus fine but watching them come to focus they seemed slightly weaker or slower to do so. As if modern bino's come to focus with more snap or strength.
Happy to hear any and all thoughts about this post.
I recently came across a 20+ year old zeiss 8x20b pocket binocular. And the person who owned them was telling me their story of how they were received/recommended from a person working in an opera house. And while I've never used pocket bins at a show (as I don't really attend them). I couldn't help but comment that I think 8x magnification and whatever the fov is were respectively too much and too narrow for such an endeavor.
And I was reminded of a pocket bin I saw recently online that seemed likely more up to the task -- never tried it -- such as the Eschenbach 4x18
And so, my question to the community is what's a good pocket bin for opera and shows? Is it context dependent such as where you're sitting or is there more a universally accepted standard for what's used?
Regarding the zeiss 8x20b I liked how dimuitive they are. They're at least 1/3rd the width of the nikon 8x20 hgl. The eyecups on the zeiss seemed good enough (not restricting), the nikons are good as well. I found the zeiss rather dim though but I only tried them indoors. Also the focusing felt "sloppy" or slow. Not sure how to describe it. They could come to focus fine but watching them come to focus they seemed slightly weaker or slower to do so. As if modern bino's come to focus with more snap or strength.
Happy to hear any and all thoughts about this post.