It did for me. I bought some used gpo 12.5’s that seemed pretty good in casual use. Less good on a long day looking for deer in the desert. For me it was the lack of depth of field that made them too much work to use. Constantly adjusting the focus, and when more than one ridge is in the field of view one will be out of focus. El’s are much better in that situation. I’m sure others I haven’t tried would also work.Spend a full day glassing (on a tripod) from before dawn to after legal light. Does that change your findings?
I agree with this and while I have my gear to use, it's a nice little financial insurance policy should the need arise. I currently own Maven and they take a beating on the resale market, losing around 1/3 (depending on specific product) of initial retail cost.The best part of Swaros is they hold value and if you decide to sell, you can off load them in a day.
The best part of Swaros is they hold value and if you decide to sell, you can off load them in a day.
There is some inherent bias in optics reviews (mine included). However, one consistent thing I’ve noticed in comparing mid-grades and near-alphas to alphas is — throughout the majority of categories the alpha is usually a smidge to clearly better, and most are surprised to see the difference in individual categories less than stunning. This often leads to the non-objective conclusion that the non-alpha is almost neck-and-neck with the alpha. But in reality all of those slightly superior characteristics add up to a better product that will offer a better experience. Whether it is worth the $ difference is a whole different discussion.
Spot on. It's easy for someone that doesn't have experience with this stuff to side-by-side an alpha and a near-alpha, and think "I can't see any difference, the near alpha must be just as good". Now give that person a Noctivid to use for a full season, then have them swap it for a Trinovid, bet they'll see a difference.There is some inherent bias in optics reviews (mine included). However, one consistent thing I’ve noticed in comparing mid-grades and near-alphas to alphas is — throughout the majority of categories the alpha is usually a smidge to clearly better, and most are surprised to see the difference in individual categories less than stunning. This often leads to the non-objective conclusion that the non-alpha is almost neck-and-neck with the alpha. But in reality all of those slightly superior characteristics add up to a better product that will offer a better experience. Whether it is worth the $ difference is a whole different discussion.
There is some inherent bias in optics reviews (mine included). However, one consistent thing I’ve noticed in comparing mid-grades and near-alphas to alphas is — throughout the majority of categories the alpha is usually a smidge to clearly better, and most are surprised to see the difference in individual categories less than stunning. This often leads to the non-objective conclusion that the non-alpha is almost neck-and-neck with the alpha. But in reality all of those slightly superior characteristics add up to a better product that will offer a better experience. Whether it is worth the $ difference is a whole different discussion.
thank you for putting all this together for us. Another great comparison.UPDATE/ADDENDUM 2023 - I took what I learned from this comparison, and purchased new Swarovski EL 8.5x42 and Zeiss SFL 8x40 and took them to Idaho for a September archery hunt. Since these are not apples and oranges to the original writeup, I don’t intend to blur the two, but I would personally feel comfortable carrying my observations as far as manufacturer quality, etc to the 8’s. NOT for optical performance, however. (Example - I’ve heard (but haven’t tried) the SFL 10’s aren’t at the same relative performance level as the 8’s.
Both of these worked brilliantly and frankly I had a tough time distinguishing between the two at times. I think that’s a compliment to both. The Zeiss, for building a VERY lightweight bino that slugs it out nicely with a long-standing alpha glass titan, and to Swaro for a design that is still very much alpha all of these years later. Here’s what I thought, but the disclaimer first. My eyes are in their 40’s. If you’re 26 you *will* have better pupil dilation, assumed better acuity, etc. So take it with a grain of salt. My final call is based purely on MY intended use, not YOUR intended use. Please consider that - more later.
Subjective stuff.
While I found the SF eyecups far more comfy than the EL, not as much so with the SFL. I have no idea if they’re actually different, or if it’s just that with extended use it wasn’t a big deal. Still more comfy by a small margin, and seem to stay put a little easier. (Of note, some people are stuck on diopter function, locking, etc. I don’t care as long as it works. Both were fine.)
Focus wheel direction. I don’t know why, but I always moved the Swaro the wrong direction initially. It seems “backwards” to me and the Zeiss more intuitive. Purely personal feel and in no way would I make a bino decision off of this. Just annoyed me a little.
Standard stud for tripod adapter. This really irritates me, and probably shouldn’t. The SFL takes one, the EL obviously doesn’t. Your call. Enough on that.
(Mostly) objective stuff. Yeah, I still have opinions.
Weight. The SFL specs lighter and to me feels even lighter than that. Both are well balanced, but sheesh these things feel amazing to me. Big nod to the Zeiss.
Size. Same. Maybe the weight difference skews my opinion here, but they are definitely smaller spec as well. Your call on how much this matters.
Acuity in generic conditions. I can’t tell a difference. I had no noticeable difference in steadiness, or ability to resolve in the field on a tripod. The light weight of the Zeiss is great in the hand, but I still couldn’t tell a ton of difference.
Low light. Excellent from both binos. You had an old pair of vortex with me as a comparison, the EL and SFL were both leagues better and almost seemed to “generate” light versus the vortex. (CRAPPY vortex, not razors or anything. I’m not a vortex hater.) Depth of field was also exactly the same to me.
Color and clarity - another push. I just couldn’t force a difference here.
Edge clarity - no contest, the EL’s win. It’s as much of a difference in favor of the EL’s as the size/weight are to the SFL.
So which is better? I think I’d have to say that the EL is still objectively the better bino. The edge clarity is clearly better and since that’s optical performance versus dimensions, that means better glass overall.
So why am I selling the EL and keeping the SFL? For the money - which is only slightly less - the SFL suits me better for my use. Strictly an archery hunter, and even though it’s a different state every year I continually find myself in timber and not utilizing glass to the extremes that the EL shines in - like edge clarity. Add the phenomenal size and weight difference with the SFL, and that’s what I’m sticking with.
For 8’s. If I go to 10’s or larger, probably Swaro until Zeiss releases whatever’s next.
If you’re a muley guy or you rifle hunt, all bets are off. I wouldn’t listen to me but if 8’s are in your wheelhouse the SFL is a really strong option.
thank you for putting all this together for us. Another great comparison.
We pay a lot for small difference. Thanks man for sharing.Wow, thanks Robby. I’m just a hack but happened to be in a place where I could purchase both and see what I thought. (That means my wife was okay with it.)
I guess the real benefit is just another real world comparison and opinion that continues to prove what most people agree on. The alphas are alpha for a reason. The magnitude of difference decreases with the increase in price, but one can’t deny it’s there. But - there’s a still a good fit for people that don’t want to/can’t drop $3000 on NL Pure’s. And that’s a good thing.
Thanks for the compliment!