

They are simply a pleasure to own and to use. Yet today you can buy them for the price of cheap pair of Chinese binoculars made of flimsy plastic and tacky rubber. And you can have the feeling of stepping back into a different age, when optical products were the result of precision engineering and skilled labour and a decent pair of binoculars was an expensive luxury. For viewing in low light, and if you don't need the stronger magnifications, they are pretty much perfect. 2015 Carl Zeiss Jena Feldstecher vergr 8 - 8x20 ca 1902 - 02 12. 2015 Carl Zeiss Jena 6x24 (zinc model) with the original case (Fernrohr 03) - 31. Military models of binoculars appeared in Carl Zeiss catalogs in August 1895 those were O.D.F.95 (Offiziers-Doppelfernrohr 95) with 6x magnification and D.F.95 (Doppelfernrohr 95) with 8x magnification. Eye relief is indeed rudimentary but the view is fantastic and pretty distortion free flare isn't a problem they come in a magnificent leather case which is worth the price of the binoculars on its own and they just feel comfortable in use. 10x50 Carl Zeiss Jena 1945 10x50 Dienstglas cxn 1944 - 20. The inscription is made in block letters against the background of Carl Zeiss Tessar photo lens schematic image. There is also an inscription Turact 1117555 8x24 on the right prism cover. Why would you want to buy binoculars which are 40 years old, made in the old style of heavy metal, and aren't that easy to use with glasses? Well, there are various answers to this question but the most important is that the Carl Zeiss 7x50 binoculars are of excellent quality optically they are a match for all but the best modern binoculars, and they are made of sturdy, well engineered metal parts. There are inscriptions Carl Zeiss Jena on the left prism cover.
