I got a well-collimated set, but, damn, these are the worst binoculars I have ever seen! They have a fake red coating that blocks red/yellow light so you get an image that is dark and blue/green. And of course to add to that the image besides bluish, is not clear either. Oh, and the field of view is ridiculous, it is like looking through a tunnel. A dark, blurry tunnel.
balmots
19 Jul 16#41
Think I might just leave these somewhere like on Public Transport. Never thought I could be so evil.
johnnyd57uk
24 Jun 16#40
Utter rubbish as has been said. Dont work. Cost more to get your money back but the seller should be kicked off here and off Ebay. Impossible to focus. Strange hues. Grrrrrrrr should have known. Not fit for purpose intended.
nbuuifx
22 Jun 16#39
Completely agree - absolute rubbish.
Just got ours they're not that far out, but....
They have a tint on the image
The image is poor
The left lens snapped off when adjusting
There was a piece of plastic across the view of the right lens (you can unscrew the lenses and remove bits like that)
Utter rubbish
djdaz01
22 Jun 16#38
Agree, terrible. Do not buy!
Guy Incognito
22 Jun 16#37
Ordered 3 pairs, figuring that maybe 1 in 3 would be OK right? All are exactly the same - rubbish. The image above is my Photoshop rendition of what I see - strange green hue, lots of ghosting, and one lens is very obscured by something inside? The bit that you can see is in focus, but the surrounding stuff makes your eyes bleed. AVOID!
r401caw
22 Jun 16#36
Binned the bins - kept the bag - dire quality
smartly
22 Jun 16#35
Anybody tried undoing the philips screws on the end covers? They seem to be faux and just rip.
Got to the adjusting screws now thanks to "dewonderful's" photo, so now to try and turn them whilst viewing.
I can understand why the seller didn't want to collimate them :disappointed:
Pluun
21 Jun 16#34
Yeth. :neutral_face:
pasheast
21 Jun 16#33
Anyone one know when the moon is next going to be a few hundred yards away? :confused::smile:
dewonderful
21 Jun 16#32
BTW, these are the adjusting screws if you want to mess around with them.
N.B. You should be able to peel up the edge of the plastic to get at them - I pulled all the plastic off to find them.
There are two on each side
dewonderful
21 Jun 16#31
I've used all the adjusting screws and nothing will get these fecking binoculars to work :man:
finnmaccool
21 Jun 16#30
Yep, I agree. They are currently sitting at the bottom of my wheelie bin.
ysdevil
20 Jun 16#28
Just got these and OMG, they are the worst thing I have ever spent my money on.
Terrible quality view and one of the top lenses broke off in my hand while I was fiddling with it. The plastics too thin to be glued.
Box of bits stuff
Wolf2010 to ysdevil
20 Jun 16#29
I received mine today and I completely agree with you...absolutely rubbish ...I know some people will argue about the price but still it's rubbish for that price ....better buy a toy binoculars.
Krizzo3
18 Jun 16#27
Ordered, if they end up not being adjustable to properly function I will ask for refund.
Hoping for the best though :smile:
happydeals
18 Jun 16#26
Thanks OP
dewonderful
18 Jun 16#25
These tit watchers better work!
smr1
18 Jun 16#24
Sometimes binoculars can't be collimated, as previously mentioned. This is all to common with recently made cheap models. Sometimes you can do it internally either with set screws or shims. Other models collimate at the objective lenses with rings.
GlentoranMark
18 Jun 16#23
I've no tripod to hold them steady and why I haven't tried to collimate them. I've a small telescope but I prefer bins, they are so much handier.
Optics have improved massively over the years and prices have dropped significantly. If I didn't already own a pair of 10x50's, I'd be all over this deal like a rash.
As Powes says, even as a science project to dismantle and make a telescope these would be great to give to a kid.
GlentoranMark
18 Jun 16#14
Many thanks, I've 2 pairs that need collimating (surprisingly a pair of 15 x 70 Celestrons) so if anything from this deal I got the link!
Heat for the price.
JonF992 to GlentoranMark
18 Jun 162#22
15x70 Celestrons are quite easy to collimate following the guidelines in the link. I did a pair of them (badged as Revelations, but the same basic bins). You should be able to do them easily. A tip is to do it at night and check using the moon. During the daytime the brain can compensate for slight out of collimation, but not at night. Checking them against the moon or Jupiter means you'll get them spot on.
Ha! I just saw this deal after the other binoculars one, and I posted a similar link there! Great minds (or inquisitive ones at least) ... :smile:
Pluun to POWYSWALES
18 Jun 162#21
Thank you.
Very informative.
POWYSWALES
18 Jun 16#20
Or give them to the kids to play with.
lightrider
18 Jun 161#18
If there's a manufacturing fault you could find that even after adjustment they still won't collimate :confused:
modaj1 to lightrider
18 Jun 16#19
it is only £3.94. in worst case bin them!
GlentoranMark
18 Jun 16#17
No he means collimating, this is an offset in manufacture or transport and something that won't fix itself.
Fish2013
18 Jun 16#16
If the poster means manually adjusting the focus, as collimating, then it's very easy and I'll briefly describe the process. Not everyone has 20/20 vision, so binocular manufacturers have allowed for this by having an eyepiece adjustable (the one with white graduation marks and/or "+" and "-" symbols on). Firstly, using a lens cover, blank off the adjustable eyepiece or front (objective) lens and focus on an object a few hundred yards away and use the centre wheel to focus as sharply as possible. now remove the lens cover and put it over the other one. Now, looking at the same object, adjust the focus using the eyepiece, clockwise or anticlockwise, but don't touch the center wheel and that's it. Remember where the index line is on the adjustable eyepiece, as this is your setting and would be different for another user.
pfarre10
18 Jun 161#15
Ordered 10, missus loves birdwatching.
And I'm in the clear, birthday, Christmas, and anniversary for the next 3 years!!
Wolf2010
18 Jun 16#13
Ordered thanks
JonF992
18 Jun 162#12
Anyone else ever collimated a set of binoculars? I have, following the instructions posted by Powyswales. Whether it is possible with these ones relies on two things. Firstly, whether there are actually collimation screws. Supercheap bins just have the prisms glued in place and can't be adjusted. Secondly, if the prisms are mounted on adjusters, can you actually get to them without wrecking the bins? Lots have the coating fastened on firmly and it's not possible to peel back gently to reach the screws. If they are, then you're, well, screwed.....
kudos1uk
18 Jun 161#11
As the same seller is also selling these as non faulty @ £11.75, my best guess would be they have already been through the stock, adjusted the ones they can and are selling them full price.
frosty68
18 Jun 161#10
every day's a schoolday
bojangles
18 Jun 16#9
I guess its down to postage & weight?
hamza123
18 Jun 1616#8
Magic, new neighbour just moved in
chipsnbeanz
16 Jun 161#3
£3.94 for one.
£14.94 for three?
Mire Mare to chipsnbeanz
17 Jun 162#7
Yep I chuckled at this, if you select x 1 from the drop down menu and add 3 to your basket you get a total of (all together now) £11.82
Opening post
Priced to clear fast
We are selling them off very cheap as the eye relief on some pairs is not set up correctly and some may also need collimating.
Some boxes seem to be all fine and some have more that need attention.
Top comments
Latest comments (42)
Just got ours they're not that far out, but....
They have a tint on the image
The image is poor
The left lens snapped off when adjusting
There was a piece of plastic across the view of the right lens (you can unscrew the lenses and remove bits like that)
Utter rubbish
Ordered 3 pairs, figuring that maybe 1 in 3 would be OK right? All are exactly the same - rubbish. The image above is my Photoshop rendition of what I see - strange green hue, lots of ghosting, and one lens is very obscured by something inside? The bit that you can see is in focus, but the surrounding stuff makes your eyes bleed. AVOID!
Got to the adjusting screws now thanks to "dewonderful's" photo, so now to try and turn them whilst viewing.
I can understand why the seller didn't want to collimate them :disappointed:
N.B. You should be able to peel up the edge of the plastic to get at them - I pulled all the plastic off to find them.
There are two on each side
Terrible quality view and one of the top lenses broke off in my hand while I was fiddling with it. The plastics too thin to be glued.
Box of bits stuff
Hoping for the best though :smile:
Optics have improved massively over the years and prices have dropped significantly. If I didn't already own a pair of 10x50's, I'd be all over this deal like a rash.
As Powes says, even as a science project to dismantle and make a telescope these would be great to give to a kid.
Heat for the price.
Very informative.
And I'm in the clear, birthday, Christmas, and anniversary for the next 3 years!!
£14.94 for three?
Cheap tricks me thinks.
MM
http://www.ukhobbystore.co.uk/binoculars/214-10x50-basic-black-binoculars.html
People are selling these for anything between £15.99 and £30 on ebay (search ebay for "UKHobbyStore Binoculars").
So a good price if they can be "collimated" (is that even a word? :smiley: ) to work properly!
I just hope when they say they are factory seconds that they don't come with more problems?