Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Alvaro Diaz
Reviewed in Spain on February 25, 2025
La verdad es que se ve con ellos de maravilla y están bien construidos, son ligeros y bastante pequeños. Lo que buscaba. No aprecio fallos ópticos, la visión es nítida y son luminosos. Por su precio no puedo pedir más.
Brian Jones
Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2025
Compact and durable outdoor viewing. I use these to check my 100 yard targets instead of a spotting scope. The glass is clear with no aberrations. Comes with a nice case. I like them enough to recommend them as a cost effective optics option.
Artifactual
Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2024
Wow, I wish I had found these a long time ago. It would have saved me a bunch of money. They advertise about 2 meter focus and that is a true claim. I just enjoyed testing them out on my front porch where I was able to watch a spider make a web on the shrub directly in front of me (about six feet away), Clear, compact, light weight, excellent quality of build.
N. Nicolas
Reviewed in France on August 28, 2024
Le rapport qualité/prix de ces jumelles est exceptionnel, achetée pour en avoir une paire tout le temps sur moi, donc avec une contrainte de poids, de taille et d'étanchéité (kayak), ces jumelles sont excellentes !
funpix
Reviewed in Germany on May 1, 2022
Für diese Preisklasse durch die umgekehrte Porroprisma- Bauweise + hochwertiges Glas und eine vollständig mehrfach beschichtete Optik unheimlich scharfes, klares, lichtstarkes und räumliches Bild. Sogar bei schlechteren Lichtverhältnissen finde ich es noch lichtstark genug. Von störenden Verzerrungen im Randbereich kann ich überhaupt nicht berichten. Die Farbwiedergabe ist sehr ausgewogen. Auch die Naheinstellgrenze zur Insektenbeobachtung ist sehr gut. Kurz noch zu meinen Testvoraussetzungen: Ich bin 53, altersweitsichtig und schaue ohne Brille in das Fernglas - also mit ausgedrehten Augenmuscheln. Zum reinen Qualitätsvergleich habe ich ein 8x32 Dachkant- Premiumfernglas eines deutschen Herstellers für 380 Euro ausprobiert und dieses dann wieder zurückgeschickt, weil es sich für mich in den Punkten Bildschärfe, Kontrast und Bildräumlichkeit vom Vortex nicht überzeugend absetzen konnte!...........Zudem ist das wasserdichte Glas durch die Gummiarmierung perfekt griffig und auch wegen der Form für alle Handgrößen sehr bequem zu halten. Gewicht und Packmaß als Immerdabeiglas im Rucksack immer noch top. Oben drauf noch eine hochwertige Corduratasche mit Schnellverschluss und eine Okularabdeckung (die sitzt ziemlich straff und möchte etwas vorsichtiger abgenommen werden). Eine Objektivabdeckung ist leider nicht dabei, allerdings verschwindet das Glas bei mir nach Gebrauch immer in der schützenden Tasche (die sich auch sicher am Gürtel befestigen lässt). Habe mir aus Neugierde auch noch die 10x26 Version zugelegt und bin auch davon absolut beeindruckt! Auch das 10x26 kann aufgrund der griffigen Form sehr ruhig gehalten werden! Das 10er habe ich woanders gekauft, es scheint aber auch von amazon verkauft zu werden, wenn man "Vortex Optics Vanquish 10x26 Fernglas" in der Suche eingibt, nur erscheint komischerweise in der Titelüberschrift trotzdem 8x26 (?!).Was die Amerikaner mit diesem Glas raushauen, ist absolut beeindruckend!...........
H. Cheok
Reviewed in Singapore on May 5, 2021
Happy with the purchase. The ocular caps are a tad too tight. Very good optics although this is the lower price range of the vortex family.
AnalogJ
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2021
As this is a review of the Vanquish 8x26, I thought it'd be useful to compare it to the Diamondback HD, which I also had a chance to use side-by-side.These both fall into the compact type of binoculars. They're both fairly small and lightweight, but the Vanquish is just a bit smaller and lighter weight (by a couple of ounces). I'm using these largely for birding, but I wanted a pair that could fit in the back of my bicycle bag in the event I want to look at shorebirds or I'm somewhere where I want to observe birds, possibly in a forested area.I also have a pair of Celestron Granite 8x42 binoculars, and those are TREMENDOUS. They're bright, clear, super sharp, and provide VERY colorful images, even in very low light. They have have great Field Of View, about 426'. These binoculars provide pinpoint focus and really pick things out of every situation.The budget binoculars in this review can't touch the Granites, but knowing what is possible (and sure, there are even better binoculars than the Granites, but those are very serious binoculars, touching significantly into high end territory).There are experts who will tell you not to even bother buying ANY set of binoculars under $100 if you're interested in quality. They sort of have a valid point. Neither the Vanquish nor the Diamondback HD are going to give you the big, bright, super sharp, incredibly colorful images of the Granites. And they're not going to match what a company like Swarovski or Zeiss can provide with their compact binoculars. So when you're spending ~$100 range, you have to adjust your expectations.The Vanquish and Diamondback HD each have their strengths and weaknesses. As I said above, don't expect the super sharpness and resolution of something at the level of the Granites (or even a Nikon Monarch 5). But both of them are adequate in that department.The Diamondback HD a hair sharper than the Vanquish and provide readily apparent more contrast and color saturation than the Vanquish. Looking at things that are white, the Diamondback HD presents a brighter white. And looking into bushes, the darker areas are more easily seen. But where the Diamondback HD fails is that there is some significant purple fringing, particularly on the edge of bright objects. And it gets in the way of a completely coherent image. Looking at a seagull in the water, I saw the seagull, its white feathers a bit brighter than with the Vanquish, but then there's this almost neon thin edge of purple. It was distracting. There's also some reflected glare in the image, although the Vanquish is not without that either.The Vanquish, in contrast, aren't as colorful, as contrasty, or bright. It's a bit blander image in that regard. In darker, more shadowy areas, you can't see into them as well as the Diamondback HD, which is part of the relative lack of brightness..I may seem like I'm going to damn the Vanquish with faint praise, but what IS presented is more coherent. There's no purple fringing to get in the way of the image. What you see is whole and pretty good. Eye relief for eyeglass wearers is fine enough. If you wear glasses, you may lose a teeny bit of the outsides, but just a wee bit, if that. Ironically, the Diamondback HDs, while it offers longer eye relief, it takes away in that relative regard with their narrower Field Of View. It's practically a wash, and I'd say that you come out ahead a bit in that regard with the Vanquish.The Vanquish, visually, aren't perfect. Again, the view isn't the brightest, the sharpest, or the most colorful. Their sharpness is fine, but what you don't is the sense of them being insightful. They're not razor sharp. For example, seeing a cormorant from about 75 feet away, I could see a little bit more of the individual feather detail with the Diamondback HD. The colors, including some of the iridescence, were more vivid, more apparent with the Diamondbacks. That added color and brightness can really add some additional excitement to seeing birds. But that darn purple fringing kept distracting me. With the Vanquish, there wasn't anything overtly distracting, so again, there wasn't anything overtly annoying about them other than the lack of vividness and extremely fine detail.But the Vanquish had a couple of subtle aberrations. There's a slight curvature at the edges, but also as I'd pan with them, I could see some ever so slight wave-like distortion of the image, even near the center. It's very, VERY subtle, but I noticed it. Overall, none of the visual flaws were overt or strong enough to discard them as an option. I wanted a decent pair of binoculars I can keep in my bike bag and not worry about them or them adding too much weight. My Granites weigh about 1 1/2 lbs compared to about half that for the Vanquish.Physically, I found the Vanquish to be able to hold more easily in my hands (My hands are slightly on the smaller side for a guy.) I found their design to be easier to hold with one hand. Even with my slightly smaller than average hand size, the compactness of the Diamondback HD 8x28, as roof prisms, were a bit too small to handle comfortably. I preferred the slightly more beefiness of the Vanquish to grasp onto.Another HUGE flaw of the Diamondback HD (and others have mentioned this in other forums) is that their design is pretty poor for those who do NOT wear glasses. Their eye relief design is so much that trying to use them with the eye pieces pulled out (you use them all the way in with eyeglasses) makes it hard not to see the the shadow of the inside walls of the binoculars. In other words, there's always these very faint, ghost-like black circles in your view. Using glasses, that is generally not a problem. In contrast, with the Vanquish, the view is fine regardless of whether you use them with or without eyeglasses.Everyone likes the Vortex lifetime warrantee. If anything happens to them other than loss, Vortex will fix or replace them. One downside to porro prisms is that the optics can get knocked out of whack. Not a problem with the Vortex warrantee.It's said that porro prism binoculars are cheaper to manufacture than roof prism ones, so that similar money will get you better performance than room prisms in the low end of things. And with roof prisms, thechallenges they present to designers require much more expensive glass, including coatings, to fix. And THAT costs lots of money. So you won't get all of those corrections with less expensive room prism binoculars. I know that when looking at full-sized binoculars, it wasn't until I was looking at close to $300 binoculars that the performance really jumped to another level.While the Diamondback HDs give you a slight taste of the higher end, with their brighter, more colorful image, their flaws are also more apparent. And from looking around at other options, it just seems that sub-$200 models offer up flaws, and you need to decide where you want to compromise. I can tell you that with full-sized binoculars, the Nikon Prostaff 7, at ~$200, was a jump up in color rendition and saturation from the Prostaff 3, at ~$100, but the Monarch 5, at ~$280, was a HUGE leap in that department, with images just popping through them.So when I first got the Diamondback HDs and looked through them, I got a bit excited as to the life of the image I was seeing through them. But I kept coming back to the Vanquish. Even though they provided a little more bland an image, there wasn't anything overtly distracting me viewing through them either. They are easy to hold. There's enough eye relief for eyeglass wearers. The FOV is better than average for a compact set of binoculars (about 330'). And the size and weight are easy to handle. Add to that, the warranty, and it's a nice buy.In the end, you have to decide on the compromises you want to make, i.e., money, size, etc. Want to pay $400 on a pair of high end, compact binoculars? You'll get appreciably better performance. By the way, I also tried a pair of Pentax 8x25 roof prisms (~$85) and they weren't very good at all for using with eyeglasses.All in all, the Vanquish are fine for the money. Just don't expect them to perform like >$200 models.
Nonya
Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2021
Size comparison to Meopta 8x25 vs the 10x26 Vanquish.Glass is nice- didn’t see any issues. The Vanquish Would enhance the views on any picturesque travel destination.Size is about the same but visually it’s smaller. The overall length wins when in glasses mode but it has some girth on the sides.The included case adds some its mass. Bag included is a cordora type with a 3/4” snap buckle that adds to the overall storage size. A thin neoprene bag with flat Velcro flap would keep the spirit of it being more compact.The grip texture is nice.The front less has no covers but has a recessed hood. It’s rear lens The has caps as others complained is tight. I would sand some material off the ring to loosen some. As they come, it seems like it’d be annoying trying to pry off caps quickly.The rear caps also lack a loop to attach to the straps. I would look into dummy cording to avoid loss.
Jeff Davis
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2020
These are great binoculars. I bought these because I wanted smaller more portable binoculars. These definitely fit that bill. I pictured these next to my 12 year old Steiner Predator 10x40 for size comparison. The Steiners are great but not easy to tote around.These Vortex have great optical clarity, arguably better than my Steiners but at least comparable. So far I’ve used them while seated in a vehicle and around the neighborhood. I love the reverse porro design. It makes them very compact but with the clarity and durability of a porro binocular. They also feel very nice in my hands and are easy to use one handed. The grip surface on the outside has a nice feel as does the surface of the focus wheel. The focus wheel feels perfect, not too tight or loose. The diopter adjustment has detents that prevent it from moving once it’s set. If I have a complaint it would be that the eyepieces are not very comfortable when they’re extended.Overall I would definitely recommend these binoculars. They are good quality and come with everything you need. Also, the Vortex warranty is fantastic.
Recommended Products