jasonpeacock
Active member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2016
- Messages
- 28
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-242 C
- Vessel Name
- Walrus
When using binoculars on a boat, you need to either pay for image stabilization or settle for less magnification. 10x50 are too powerful and jump around a lot when on a boat. Most marine binoculars w/o image stabilization are 7x50, which is usually plenty good for most uses and have a large enough field-of-view you can easily track what you're watching.
In addition, you also want a good eye relief (less "squinting"), and a bright image (the "exit pupil"), these differ between manufacturers a lot and are sometimes hard numbers to find.
Nikon makes some of the best binoculars with those specs - super comfortable to look through for a long time, and very bright - they almost feel like they are magnifying the light:
Nikon 7440 OceanPro 7x50 Waterproof Binocular
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B00006C2M4
In addition, you also want a good eye relief (less "squinting"), and a bright image (the "exit pupil"), these differ between manufacturers a lot and are sometimes hard numbers to find.
Nikon makes some of the best binoculars with those specs - super comfortable to look through for a long time, and very bright - they almost feel like they are magnifying the light:
Nikon 7440 OceanPro 7x50 Waterproof Binocular
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B00006C2M4