grappling_hook
WKR
Two.
A 10x42 for hunting woods and alpine.
A 7x50 for use on the boat (any higher mag is generally too unstable).
A 10x42 for hunting woods and alpine.
A 7x50 for use on the boat (any higher mag is generally too unstable).
The first of twelve steps is to admit I’m a binoholic. My addiction is justified by different uses for different hobbies… that’s what I tell myself.
Hunting, boating, photography, hiking, looking at the view from the house.
And I’m always looking for an excuse to get more!
The 12x42 NL Pure was the only bino I used during the seasons last fall to get a lot of time with it. The image is stunning but it suffers from blackouts easily. The more I used them the less it happened (or the less I noticed it) but comparing them to 10x42 NL Pure the 10x are much easier to stay behind; the image in the 12x is seriously nothing short of amazing and if you can deal with the blackouts they're incredible.
That's super interesting. Everyone I've put behind my 12x gets blackouts but they all love the image as well. The 10x NL I played with we're like putting on HD magnified contacts. Everything was just easy.I actually had the opposite experience with NL's. Initially I bought 10x, but I would get a ton of black outs and even though I loved the image and FOV, I sold them to keep my 8.5x42 EL's. Then to scratch a mental itch I bought the 12x and I have had no issues with them at all. By far the best binos i've ever owned.