Swarovski 14x52 NLs vs 12x42 NLs

Sako300

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Mar 24, 2019
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With a lot of scouting and even archery season upon us for mule deer, has anyone compared these 2 binoculars in the field together?
 

Block

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Nov 13, 2018
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I’m sure they are badd to the bone,,, but I can’t see them being THAT much better at picking out animals at distance than the 12x which you can rock in the bino harness…too close in power to wana carry both IMO,,, some 20x woulda been a better way to entise us to buy both,,.
 

Nate D

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Oct 11, 2021
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I have the same question. With 8x on the chest would I be better served with the 12x or 14x on a tripod.
 

nphunter

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I went with 14’s. My hunting partner has 12’s and there have been several times that my Meostar 15’s outperformed the NL’s. The 3x just added enough more zoom it was helpful, essentially we were able to see a branch bull with the NL’s and could tell how big he was with the 15’s.

There have been several times I wished I had the 12’s over my 15’s due to a variety of reasons, one of the biggest was the NL’s depth of field and FOV. I carry 10’s on my chest but am really considering going with the 8.5’s for the better FOV.
 

mxgsfmdpx

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Yes. @huntnful and I both have significant time behind both the 12 and 14 NLs. We’ve also both gone back and forth on which unit to use as our primary tripod glassing unit.

Here in AZ and being a coues deer hunter, I’ve gone back to the 14s from the 12s. If I didn’t scout and hunt coues deer in big open AZ country I’d stick with the 12s.

I believe @huntnful went from 12s to 14s and is going back to 12s.

With your application being mule deer as mentioned in your original post, I’d go with 12s personally.
 

huntnful

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So many good uses for each bino! It’s legitimately tough to choose!

I could find several reasons for each bino.

The 14’s are PHENOMENAL to look through. But I ended up back at 12’s only because the 10X Revic binos aren’t great for glassing, so to me they’re just a rangefinder. Which leaves the 12’s as my main bino
 

Tahoe1305

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Jun 9, 2019
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My 2 cents. The ~2x zoom isn’t going to help out a tone IF you already plan to carry a spotter (even a compact spotter). I haven’t found a set of binos that can replicate the detail a spotter can break out (even a 18x set).

For me the size/weight is the bigger issue (again if I have a spotter already). I’d rather have wider FOV, lighter and smaller on my chest.

If you are trying to carry just one set and no spotter I think the argument for 14s is stronger.

Said another way, I’m going to be able to see animal movement likely with either set at realistic hunting ranges (inside a few miles). What the 14s will give me is a bit more detail (counting tines) inside of 1000yds or so that the 12x may struggle a bit with depending on conditions. For me, if I’m trophy hunting I have a spotter.
 
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I have always been a bigger field of view guy. I went from 10x42 HD el's to 12 x 42 NL's. I now have a few years behind the 12's and have spent enough time behind the 14 NL's to know there is no reason for me to upgrade to the 14's. It is really personal preference, but I routinely find more animals than guys with higher magnification Bino's. Actual glassing technique is very important when scanning for animals. FWIW, I usually use my 12x42's and also have a spotting scope to accurately field judge.
 
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I’ve had both side by side and by themselves. You cannot go wrong, both are incredible and the difference is starting to split hairs.

It comes down the whole kit.

For several years it was 12x NLs plus handheld RF, plus/minus big eyes depending on the hunt and terrain.

Going forward it’s 8x32 RF binos plus 14s. In some cases just the 8x32 and the big eyes, depending on the terrain and how much I’ll be moving.

The difference for me is that 12s can be handheld/standalone, but I strongly prefer 8s handheld and in tighter/brushy country, which for my style ends up being pretty important on many hunts.

14s do have a little more reach than 12s, plus I can field judge a bit better with them, allowing me to leave the big eyes in the truck and not bring a spotting scope when I carry the 14s. With just the 12s I often wanted a little better look before deciding to stalk..the 14s I feel I can see well enough what the frame is unless it’s several miles away.
 
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