I tend to do things a little differently for a spotter, I use a couple cheap 500mm focal length Maksutov Cassegrain telescopes for spotters (one is my spare).
They have a 90mm objective so the resolution is high compared to smaller scopes.
A binoviewer does not make a set of binoculars, it just uses prisms to give you two eyepieces with one scope. Some people say it dims the image, some people say it enhances the view of dim objects because you are using both of your eyes. But that's for astronomy when you're looking at very dim objects.
The biggest thing it seems to do is reduce eye fatigue and let your brain do more image processing.
Any way, I'm going to try to delve in to the telescope binoviewer realm and figure out what I need for a binoviewer with long eye relief eyepieces, a wide field of view and about 40x magnification.
It seems like that might be around a $400 upgrade but if it does what I hope, it should turn a good spotting scope in to an exceptional one. With the downside being a bit of bulk and weight.
If anyone has used a binoviewer spotting scope, I would love to hear what you thought of the view.
It seems like the optical path length and getting to focus are the biggest issues. Maks seem to have focus mechanisms that work but they can pull the mirror out of the optimum position. People fix that by using a Barlow lens of some sort. I'll want a 45° erecting prism in there too so it will be a bunch of stuff working together, hopefully not vignetting.
They have a 90mm objective so the resolution is high compared to smaller scopes.
A binoviewer does not make a set of binoculars, it just uses prisms to give you two eyepieces with one scope. Some people say it dims the image, some people say it enhances the view of dim objects because you are using both of your eyes. But that's for astronomy when you're looking at very dim objects.
The biggest thing it seems to do is reduce eye fatigue and let your brain do more image processing.
Any way, I'm going to try to delve in to the telescope binoviewer realm and figure out what I need for a binoviewer with long eye relief eyepieces, a wide field of view and about 40x magnification.
It seems like that might be around a $400 upgrade but if it does what I hope, it should turn a good spotting scope in to an exceptional one. With the downside being a bit of bulk and weight.
If anyone has used a binoviewer spotting scope, I would love to hear what you thought of the view.
It seems like the optical path length and getting to focus are the biggest issues. Maks seem to have focus mechanisms that work but they can pull the mirror out of the optimum position. People fix that by using a Barlow lens of some sort. I'll want a 45° erecting prism in there too so it will be a bunch of stuff working together, hopefully not vignetting.