by Jne_K on Fri Jun 04, 2010 7:21 am
Hi
That is asking a great deal of any
binocular if you expect to actually see details on a sky diver or even a parachute at that distance of nearly a mile. Handheld
binoculars simply won't give you enough magnification to see that level of detail, but I would at least borrow a conventional 10x42 or 10x50 to see how it works. I suspect you will need more magnification. Going to something with higher magnification - an observation
binocular or
spotting scope - though, will require you to use a
tripod for the sake of steadiness, but then you have tracking issues as far as following a moving object.
Hi
That is asking a great deal of any [link=http://www.opticsplanet.com/binoculars.html]binocular[/link] if you expect to actually see details on a sky diver or even a parachute at that distance of nearly a mile. Handheld [link=http://www.opticsplanet.com/binoculars.html]binoculars[/link] simply won't give you enough magnification to see that level of detail, but I would at least borrow a conventional 10x42 or 10x50 to see how it works. I suspect you will need more magnification. Going to something with higher magnification - an observation [link=http://www.opticsplanet.com/binoculars.html]binocular[/link] or [link=http://www.opticsplanet.com/spottingscopes.html]spotting scope[/link] - though, will require you to use a [link=http://www.opticsplanet.com/tripods.html]tripod[/link] for the sake of steadiness, but then you have tracking issues as far as following a moving object.