I have been selling a bunch of binoculars lately and was thinking it was time to slightly reverse course! This time I went to at least for me, left field and purchased an Opticron Aurora BGA VHD 8X42(why oh why does Opticron have to use SO many letters?). So here's a short review and a comparison.
I've had the Aurora for all of almost three days. Normally I wouldn't even bother to comment about a binocular so soon but I'm going to make an exception. As I normally do, I enjoy comparing a new optic to one in the same class/price point that I have and like. My initial thought was the Monarch HG which is a very proven commodity. I couldn't put my hands on mine right quick but the Zeiss SFL 8X40 did catch my eye. After all, it's the current darling of the BF birding world and is really a nice binocular! So SFL it is.
A few comparisons....
When I took the Aurora out of the box my first thought was it was a little heavy. Not so. 25.0 ounces on my electronic scale. The SFL 8X40 doesn't weight THAT much less at 23.7 ounces. Only 1.3 ounces less.
FOV....they are about equal...420 for the SFL and 423 for the Aurora. I'm going to take their word for it as I couldn't tell any difference between the two.
Diopter adjustment... Aurora is centrally located on the focus knob just pull out to set the push back to retain. SFL is under the right eyecup.
Both are made in Japan.
Focus adjustment... The SFL is pretty close to 10 out of 10 and it's just as good as the day I bought it. The Aurora is not too far behind. I'd say it's very similar to the Monarch HG with a little less resistance that I like better. I'd probably give the Aurora a 8.9/10.
Hinge tension- This is one of those areas I'm picky about. I'd say the SFL is excellent in this regard and the Aurora would probably rate "acceptable." I would like for the Aurora hinge tension to be a little tighter.
Use in the field...
So remember...I've owned the Aurora three days. I've been out birding with it twice. Both days cloudy and overcast. I like the Aurora more than I thought I would. I guess it is the best binocular Opticron has ever offered and it shows. In fact I thought the view was very much similar to an SLC. Even on these cloudy days resolution seemed to me to be better than expected. Swapping between the two binoculars...both are good binoculars but the kicker was...lateral chromatic aberration. There is no denying the rather obvious victor...the Opticron Aurora. Conditions were about perfect. CA becomes noticeable in the SFL slightly off center. I'd say at least 80% of the FOV is CA free with the Aurora. Kind of eye opening to me.
More observations to follow...
I've had the Aurora for all of almost three days. Normally I wouldn't even bother to comment about a binocular so soon but I'm going to make an exception. As I normally do, I enjoy comparing a new optic to one in the same class/price point that I have and like. My initial thought was the Monarch HG which is a very proven commodity. I couldn't put my hands on mine right quick but the Zeiss SFL 8X40 did catch my eye. After all, it's the current darling of the BF birding world and is really a nice binocular! So SFL it is.
A few comparisons....
When I took the Aurora out of the box my first thought was it was a little heavy. Not so. 25.0 ounces on my electronic scale. The SFL 8X40 doesn't weight THAT much less at 23.7 ounces. Only 1.3 ounces less.
FOV....they are about equal...420 for the SFL and 423 for the Aurora. I'm going to take their word for it as I couldn't tell any difference between the two.
Diopter adjustment... Aurora is centrally located on the focus knob just pull out to set the push back to retain. SFL is under the right eyecup.
Both are made in Japan.
Focus adjustment... The SFL is pretty close to 10 out of 10 and it's just as good as the day I bought it. The Aurora is not too far behind. I'd say it's very similar to the Monarch HG with a little less resistance that I like better. I'd probably give the Aurora a 8.9/10.
Hinge tension- This is one of those areas I'm picky about. I'd say the SFL is excellent in this regard and the Aurora would probably rate "acceptable." I would like for the Aurora hinge tension to be a little tighter.
Use in the field...
So remember...I've owned the Aurora three days. I've been out birding with it twice. Both days cloudy and overcast. I like the Aurora more than I thought I would. I guess it is the best binocular Opticron has ever offered and it shows. In fact I thought the view was very much similar to an SLC. Even on these cloudy days resolution seemed to me to be better than expected. Swapping between the two binoculars...both are good binoculars but the kicker was...lateral chromatic aberration. There is no denying the rather obvious victor...the Opticron Aurora. Conditions were about perfect. CA becomes noticeable in the SFL slightly off center. I'd say at least 80% of the FOV is CA free with the Aurora. Kind of eye opening to me.
More observations to follow...