A 50 mm binocular is the dusk and marine class: maximum light gathering in a handy carrying format. Classic as 7x50 (Marine), 10x50 (all-round) and 12x50 (Long-Range with tripod).
The objective diameter determines light gathering. With a 7x50 binocular, the exit pupil is 7.14 mm – the maximum pupil opening of the human eye, i.e. full light utilisation. With 10x50 still 5.0 mm, with 12x50 = 4.17 mm. This means 50 mm delivers about 42 % more light area than a 42 mm binocular. For even more light gathering, the 56 mm binocular is the pro level.
On a 50 mm binocular, three magnifications are classic:
On a 50 mm binocular, build quality and optics clearly pay off. ED glass, full multi-coating (FMC) and BAK-4 prisms with phase coating are mandatory in this class. Waterproof (IPX7) and nitrogen or argon filling should be standard. Marine models often have integrated compass. For 12x50 and larger, tripod adapter (1/4" thread) is sensible. General buying criteria on the main category Binoculars & Field Glasses.
Because the exit pupil of 7.14 mm corresponds to the maximum eye pupil – full light utilisation. On moving ground (ship), the low magnification delivers a steady image.
50 mm delivers 42 % more light area but is about 200 g heavier. For pure daytime and all-round use the 42 mm is enough; for deep dusk and stars clearly the 50 mm.
Very good. At 7x50 with 7.14 mm exit pupil usable deep into the night – at 10x50 with 5.0 mm still practical in deep dusk.
Yes. 10x50 and 15x50 are classics for moon, Jupiter moons, star clusters and brighter Deep-Sky objects. For 15x50 a tripod is mandatory.
7x50 as marine classic, 10x50 as dusk all-rounder, 12x50 as Long-Range with tripod. More reach with 15x50 or zoom 8-24x50.
At 7x50 and 10x50 freehand-suitable. At 12x50 recommended, from 15x50 mandatory.
Original goods from Swiss stock · Free shipping over CHF 100 · Personal advice
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