I will say there’s a lot to like with the vintage SWA bins, and if I would’ve bought a few of these vintage SWA before I went down the road of the modern roofs and classic porros , I will admit my equipment collection would be smaller. But it has to be the right ones, some of these have an awful distracting yellow or green hue as well as some horrible pincushion distortion, especially the very super wides over 11°. And the some with low quality bk7 prisms were a joke by todays standards. The amber and violet coatings in my opinion are horrible. They can still be fun because of the immense FOV and DOF of the 7x, but then image wise they really don’t compare to modern high quality options. Another thing is that the majority, probably 80-90% of the vintage super wides were not too good.
I don’t know too much about a cult following of alpha binoculars , I think if you have the resources to buy the best they are certainly a positive evolution of optical quality as well as function as an optical tool. I’m pretty sure that if they made modern day SWA 7X binoculars with very large prisms with modern glass and coatings they would be even better than the vintage ones. OK maybe that covering my peel after a few years 😲.
Something I think people don’t realize is that these high end vintage SWA were very expensive and were the alpha’s of their time. If you look at the catalog for the Bushnell range master in 1955 , I believe they were $150, that’s the equivalent of almost $1700 today.
Im not taking anything away from the Nikon E’s or any other of the more classic porros, but I don’t think they’re on the level of the vintage SWA or the high end roofs of today.
Today there are phenomenal binoculars in the $500 range that in most ways are superior to the vintage high quality super wides , they just lack in the characteristic of very large prisms and low magnification DOF.