![]() The usual tint on coated lenses is purple to blue. Also, Zeiss East Germany did actually have supply agreements with some Asian producers, so there may be authentic Zeiss fakes. PS I'd be confident this is an authentic glass, the Binux did not sell in sufficient volume to make fakes worthwhile. There are lots of more fancy reticles than this vanilla linear scale, the East German Zeiss EDF had perhaps the most extreme, it could be used to judge tank distance by the height of the vehicle. The range finder reticle is for a very rough guess, you assume the size of the object that you are looking at, see how many arc seconds (or milliradians or whatever the reticle marks represent) the object covers and basic trig will tell how far off it is. Your Binux is item 71 on the list, noted for a pretty wide FoV ( ), last produced in the early 1960s. Scroll down to where it says 'Leitz binocular models' for the link. These have the range finder filter, I'd like to know how this thing works if anyone knows.ĮDIT: Looks like my picture angle cut the serial number off.it's 545763 (found below the "Wetzlar")Ī bit more color on your glass is available here: They have a pretty good scratch on what looks like the inside of one of the lenses which is kinda odd, I guess someone tried to open them up and did that.good thing is that the view doesn't seem to be affected. They look okay, came with a cheap case that says "Taiwan" on it, hopefully these aren't total copies likes the infamous Zeiss binos I've seen. Here are a few photos I grabbed below, let me know if you would like to see more. First time poster, long time lurker here.just thought I'd share a set of binos I picked up recently and hopefully find more information on them from you all other than what's posted on the internet since you all seem to be very knowledgeable on these vintage binoculars.
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