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Posted 20 hours ago

Bresser Binoculars 8 x 60

£9.9£99Clearance
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Light intensive 60mm lenses with variable dioptre setting and flexible eye cups ideal for use with eye wear I sold it at Holt's auctioneers with the cases and dies in the same auction as by that time the new .270 Winchester RWS Evolution load was introduced and if I ever want to shoot wild boar as the optics on this rifle whilst very good were fixed x4 power and I have a Zeiss 1.5-4.5 or a Zeiss 3-9 option on the .270 Winchester and the better suited lower end power of those optics is for me more important. Particularly after Germany invaded Russia in 1941 the Wehrmacht needed binoculars that could withstand cold temperatures. A number of markings exist that indicate Attached the "slim"8x60 and the "fat" 8x60 for comparison, slim and fat are post-war collectors terms. It is well worth getting any vintage binoculars professionally cleaned and serviced. You will notice the difference in performance. References

Gert ..Huon refers to both the 8X60R and the 8X56R alternative names being 8mm Kropatschek 1st model and 8mm Kropatschek short which was introduced about 1899. The bullet was not seated as deep and therefore the OAL was about the same. The .348 case converts well to this use and gives you a length = to the short These are A base cases so a bevel needs to be turned to match the bolt face.. Groove diam of the rifles runs large mine being .330" ones, but do not have a maker's mark, a letter code or the word 'Dienstglas'. They are just marked 6x30. My thoughts are that these were made after the War for the surplus Firstly, the fully coated or fully multicoated description was actually in the flesh a single coat on the front and a single coat on the rear eyepiece surface. . All other surfaces were completely uncoated. Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, the Desert Fox, used a pair of 10x50 Dienstglas binoculars. His have the bakelite eyepiece caps missing. Did he remove For less than what a good original 8 x 60 will fetch, one could have at least two Busch design 45 deg inclination 10 x 80 multicoated ( and not just "broadband" single layer MgF2). What is more, they could be lightened considerably by substitution of Delrin and aluminum for the steel in some parts of the 45 deg inclination 10 x 80, as well as removal of the heavy filters and filter mechanism, I have done so, and they become hand-holdable.

There's been discussions in the refractors forum that some refractors benefit from using a prism diagonal instead of a mirror. The aberrations are said to cancel some of the objective's aberrations. Of course this is at much higher f/# than most bins. One way or the other, the effect of the prism should be taken into account in the overall optical design and will be much greater at low f/#. It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.

This topic so invigorated me that yesterday I pulled 70 bullets, 154-gr FMJ, from corrosive Turk ammunition, and salvaged them and the powder to reload to less pressure in 8x57mm cases, for my other Mausers. Later in the War a tan or sand colour was used for Army binoculars. However, this does not mean they were intended for use in the desert. Price guideDrill holes do not need to be cleaned during vertical installation (ceiling and floor). For floor fixings the hole must be drilled 3x drill hole diameter deeper. will not be perfect. Ones that are damaged or are not usable as binoculars are best avoided though.

Viewers can stream all episodes of Waterloo Road, including 2023’s two new series, exclusively on BBC iPlayer now. Fans can get behind-the-scenes news and gossip from set via Waterloo Road – The Official Podcast on BBC Sounds, presented by cast members Adam Thomas and Priyasasha Kumari. The next series (8x60’) of Waterloo Road has already filmed and will premiere on BBC One and iPlayer early next year, with a trailer available here. Original cases are rare and can be worth as much as the binoculars. Early cases were leather. Later ones were made from bakelite. Condition One reason this is credible, is that from my own experience, I have found several of these older rifles with the claw mounts to have the bases installed so precisely, that scopes built by one maker would swap with those installed by another gunsmith, years apart. So fitting a new scope would be quite easy. I've just applied Steve's measurement technique to my (ex-Lidl, 2005 vintage) Meade-branded 10x50 and to my (astro-Dealer supplied, 1989 vintage) Hunter Astronomical 11x80.These are the most practical size for modern applications such as bird watching or spectator sport. They give you powerful magnification and bright lenses. The 7x50 binocular was more suited to Naval operations. This is because lower magnification binoculars are more suitable for use on ships in rough weather.

You know what that means, eh. A 12.7x50 right-angle bino having a 7.6 deg. true field (100 deg. apparent) will soon be emerging from the LeDrew Skunk Works! A 90 deg. Amici will handle an f/3.5 cone, as long as the eyepiece has its field stop reasonably close to the bottom end of the barrel. If the field stop is just a bit too deeply positioned up the eyepiece barrel for use with a minimum-aperture prism, a larger diameter prism will likely work. Glenn: I learned the hard way that at f/3.5, the prisms cannot be ignored, and were compensated by at least the eyepieces in the f/3.5 WW II 45 deg inclined 70 deg field 10 x 80 Busch design( Busch, Leitz, Schneider, Feuss, etc. )I was trying to adapt wide angle Tele-Vue eyepieces. Perhaps one should consider mirrors in a phantom roof configuration. I have done so in detail ( see the 200mm Macau Matsumoto adaptation thread), but have not built such yet.

These are the classic night vision binoculars preferred by sailors. However, this spec was also used by the Wehrmacht (Army) and Luftwaffe (Air Force) as well It was in a glass showcase with Hubble bubble smoking equipment that is sometimes seen being used in Eastern countries. You say that you would be very much interested. How interested, in money terms? Of course, these would not have war eagles or swastikas,so would be of lesser appeal for the militaria collectors or the speculator/investor in rarities per se, but would be multicoated on all surfaces, which the WW II production was not. Since this chamber reaming operation is also possible for earlier I-bore rifles, 8×60mm chambered rifles (without the S or any other further additions) also exist. 8×60mm rifles sport the earlier tighter 8.07mm (.318 in) I-bore as found in the 8×57mm I.

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