Binos that allow you to look around in the FOV

buckdandy

FNG
Joined
Dec 6, 2021
Messages
12
I would like to start a discussion about which binos are the most forgiving in terms of eye placement (ie getting the full FOV without being dead center and staring straight ahead). I have young, sharp eyes and a tendency to want to look around in the FOV, rather than move the FOV.

When I started looking for my first set of binos, my sole focus was maximum glass quality for the price. That approach landed me a set of Kowa Genesis 10.5x44s -- with the decision largely based upon the experience of others here on rokslide. They are an objectively nice set of binos, with sweet spot clarity that rivals the very best. My one criticism is that I found them somewhat finicky about eye placement. Slight movements of my face and any attempt to move my eyes within the FOV resulted in blackouts.

Instead of going the incremental route or looking in the same price range, I went straight to the Swaro EL SV 8.5x42. By all accounts this was the easy choice for eye comfort. I thought that bumping up glass quality and increasing exit pupil from 4.2 to 4.9 would give me the relaxed view I was looking for. Unfortunately, I found them to be nearly as finicky. There was also a sharp ring that appeared around the center of the FOV when panning around (in my uneducated opinion, a possible result of the field-flattening lenses). They were promptly sent back.

After my experiences and some reading on the birder forums, I'm currently thinking that an oversized exit pupil might be what I'm looking for. Do I need to go with the comically large Swaro SLC 8x56, Zeiss Victory HT 8x54, etc? Or is there another way to get what I'm looking for?
 

JakeSCH

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Jun 14, 2020
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It sounds more like the angle of your head. Stick your chin forward, get really close to the glass and only move your eyes to look around. You may need to get the binos higher with the tripod and close your eye cups all the way.

Those EL SV 8.5x42 are incredible binos with a huge FOV and extremely forgiving.

When my binos are to low and i hunch over to look through them, it significantly reduces their capability and I run into issues like you are having.
 

BBob

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Jun 29, 2020
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No idea why you had trouble with an EL with 20mm of eye relief. I've owned a couple generations of EL's in 10X and no problems all with less eye relief than the 8.5's. I started in the 80's with Zeiss 10x40's and no issues, same for early Leica Trinovid's in 10. NL 12X is a breeze. Are you glassing with eye cups all of the way down? I've glassed since the 80's with eycups rolled down or retracted all the way for this reason. Are you hand holding or using a tripod?
 
Joined
May 22, 2014
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Yep another vote for eye cups all the way in. For years the first thing I did was extend the eye cups out fully and would get the blackout edges when I’d move my eyes around. I tried with the cups in fully and it’s a world of difference! My hunting buddies still roll their eye cups out and I’ve tried showing them the difference but they just don’t want to try it.
 
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Only time my eyecups are out (I don't wear glasses) is when I'm hand-holding them as it helps me steady the bins a bit and it does block out stray light. When my bins are supported, I always twist the eyecups in, as if I was wearing glasses, so I can "look around" the FOV better. Works great.

After two full years with only my 8x32 Conquest HD's, I'm still not interested in any other binocular anymore. On a tripod or window mount, I can see things with them that most folks wouldn't even think was possible with "just" 8x bins. They are incredible.
 

Brewski

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 12, 2018
Messages
159
I agree with the above posts, the combo of FOV and eye relief on the 8.5 EL's is great and a tripod takes to the next level. If the OP still had them I would suggest trying the eye caps in the second position, spending more time fine tuning the diopeter focus, and then center focusing as clear as possible at say 300 yards. Once I focus at 300 yards, I can see very clear from 100 yards to 1500 yards without bino adjustment.
 
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buckdandy

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Joined
Dec 6, 2021
Messages
12
Thanks for the replies, all.

I used both pairs handheld and mounted on a tripod. When handheld, I find the eye cup position that gives me the most comfortable view. When on the tripod, I have the eye cups all the way down.

I try every conceivable position when test driving glass, adjusting for IPD, head position, eye cups, diopter, etc. I'll try what JakeSCH suggested concerning chin placement, this evening.

Eye relief was surely not the EL's problem for me, although I can't say I'd want any more than 20mm. The ring in the FOV was the primary issue.

Does anyone have experience with large exit pupil binos (>5.2)? It seems this gives you more room to roam. All of this is likely more on me than the glass, but I'd like to find something comfortable to use.
 
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buckdandy

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Joined
Dec 6, 2021
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I gave the head repositioning with the Kowas a try on the tripod. Still getting blackouts when I make even the slightest move.

The quality I'm looking for is something that I've seen in a Leupold VX-5HD (likely can be found in many others too, this is just from personal experience). I could barely tilt my head into the eyebox and get an immediate, full view of the FOV. It was maintained even when moving my head back and forth. Granted, we're talking about an exit pupil of 14+, but I was floored by how easy it was to look through it.

Can anyone with a monster set of binos (8x w/ 54+ objectives) confirm/deny that they provide a similar kind of easy view?
 
Joined
Oct 19, 2019
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875
Hi Buck,

A number of factors (eye relief, shape of exit pupils, eyecup design, etc) contribute to the phenomena of “blackouts,” “kidney-beaning,” or just plain finicky eye position with a particular binocular model. Unfortunately, just looking at a spec sheet won’t tell the whole story. However, it does seem to occur most often with short eye relief (personal IPD also comes into play). But like you I just won‘t settle for a binocular that I have to fight or struggle with. If it doesn’t give me a full and easy view when holding in a natural position I‘m just not going to get the binocular’s full potential, and it also leads to quicker fatigue. Also, don’t think it’s a good idea to flatten the eye cups to make up for a poor fit. If one doesn’t wear glasses - this will introduce additional stray light into the view.

As you’ve already noticed the Kowas (claimed 16mm ER, but some reviewers found less) are pretty well-known for these issues. Folks can take steps to adjust to it, but why bother when there are so many other quality choices. IME NLs are quite finicky and the ELs have a bit of tunnel-vision and globe effect - but these issues don’t show up in my view through the SLCs. With Zeiss, the 42mm SFs and the FLs give me a very full and easy view; but I struggle with the 32mm SFs and a smidge with the Conquests (here I’ve heard getting the longer eye cups makes a big difference).

You asked about big objective binoculars. I have two 56mm and a 50mm. All else being equal these bigger objective binoculars often provide a smidge greater detail saturation than their smaller siblings. It is simply a matter of more light - greater brightness in low light but not necessarily in full daylight. If shopping for a big OBJ glass, pay special attention to super-high light transmission rates (Abbe-Koenig prisms help). I also like to stay with at least 18mm ER. A few that get rave reviews are 56mm SLCs, 56mm Zeiss FL (discontinued), 50mm Ultravid HD+, and the 50mm ELs (but I’ve noticed RB effect in these). A great new offering is the Maven B6 10x50. I have a set - 18mm ER, no blackouts or positioning issues, crisp/bright/detailed/easy image, and very compact for a 50mm - size/weight similar to a 42mm.

Sorry for the long-winded response but wanted to provide a full perspective.
 
Joined
Apr 3, 2021
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837
I think you're expecting too much from optics. Have you ever been able to achieve this Oculus VR level of eye relief before?

A phoneskope might be your only option for freedom of movement.
 
OP
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buckdandy

FNG
Joined
Dec 6, 2021
Messages
12
Hi Buck,

A number of factors (eye relief, shape of exit pupils, eyecup design, etc) contribute to the phenomena of “blackouts,” “kidney-beaning,” or just plain finicky eye position with a particular binocular model. Unfortunately, just looking at a spec sheet won’t tell the whole story. However, it does seem to occur most often with short eye relief (personal IPD also comes into play). But like you I just won‘t settle for a binocular that I have to fight or struggle with. If it doesn’t give me a full and easy view when holding in a natural position I‘m just not going to get the binocular’s full potential, and it also leads to quicker fatigue. Also, don’t think it’s a good idea to flatten the eye cups to make up for a poor fit. If one doesn’t wear glasses - this will introduce additional stray light into the view.

As you’ve already noticed the Kowas (claimed 16mm ER, but some reviewers found less) are pretty well-known for these issues. Folks can take steps to adjust to it, but why bother when there are so many other quality choices. IME NLs are quite finicky and the ELs have a bit of tunnel-vision and globe effect - but these issues don’t show up in my view through the SLCs. With Zeiss, the 42mm SFs and the FLs give me a very full and easy view; but I struggle with the 32mm SFs and a smidge with the Conquests (here I’ve heard getting the longer eye cups makes a big difference).

You asked about big objective binoculars. I have two 56mm and a 50mm. All else being equal these bigger objective binoculars often provide a smidge greater detail saturation than their smaller siblings. It is simply a matter of more light - greater brightness in low light but not necessarily in full daylight. If shopping for a big OBJ glass, pay special attention to super-high light transmission rates (Abbe-Koenig prisms help). I also like to stay with at least 18mm ER. A few that get rave reviews are 56mm SLCs, 56mm Zeiss FL (discontinued), 50mm Ultravid HD+, and the 50mm ELs (but I’ve noticed RB effect in these). A great new offering is the Maven B6 10x50. I have a set - 18mm ER, no blackouts or positioning issues, crisp/bright/detailed/easy image, and very compact for a 50mm - size/weight similar to a 42mm.

Sorry for the long-winded response but wanted to provide a full perspective.

I appreciate your thorough and thoughtful response.

I've tried an older generation SLC 10x42, but not a newer one, so that may be worth a look. Also tried the conquest, which needs longer eye cups or relief for me. Other Zeiss will be explored as well.

Ultimately I need to test drive all these options. The trick is finding a store that carries them. Maven should be easy enough with their demo program.
 

Brummie75

FNG
Joined
Jun 12, 2022
Messages
50
Personally, I’ve never been able to look around the FOV in a binocular in the same way I would a scope. Unless I was using it one-eyed, like a scope.
 
Joined
Mar 25, 2013
Messages
635
Location
Alberta
Try a 32mm alpha with the shorter eye relief and cups in the lowest position. My 10x32 Leica ultravid HD’s are some of the most comfy and instantly comfy glasses I’ve looked through and a great amount of focus through the distance being viewed.
 
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buckdandy

FNG
Joined
Dec 6, 2021
Messages
12
An update on the glass hunt...

After test-driving the Maven B1.2 8x42 and Maven B6 10x50, I ended up tracking down a deal on a set of SLC 10x56 in another forum. These are what I was looking for.

The combination of the quality of glass, ease of view, and brightness of the image are unmatched in my search. Of course they are comparatively large, but the experience is worth the size penalty.
 

4th_point

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2022
Messages
596
An update on the glass hunt...

After test-driving the Maven B1.2 8x42 and Maven B6 10x50, I ended up tracking down a deal on a set of SLC 10x56 in another forum. These are what I was looking for.

The combination of the quality of glass, ease of view, and brightness of the image are unmatched in my search. Of course they are comparatively large, but the experience is worth the size penalty.
Thanks for posting your update. I know that it's sometimes easy to forget so I appreciate it.

Anyway I read your first post and absolutely understand what you were looking for and describing. And it's not just an eye relief spec or retracting the eyecups fully as suggested.

I'm interested in the 10x56 SLC myself. I find 42mm better suited to 8x than 10x. For 10x I am leaning more and more to 50mm+.
 
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