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Your cart is empty.4.4 out of 5 stars
- #1,116 in Camera & Photo Products (See Top 100 in Camera & Photo Products)
- #190 in Monoculars
Pat G.
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2025
Quality optics, smooth focusing, good weight and good value.
Steven R
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2025
More of a toy than an optical instrument. Focus was elusive. Color rendition poor. Not recommended.
CMan
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2024
I take this when I go to the range on "pistol day" as I am older and don't have great eyesight. This monocular works great, stays clean, is super easy to operate, even though the instructions weren't great but I'm nit-picking. For example, you can evidently twist the eye piece out or in but I haven't noticed if it's just a comfort thing or it provides more focus. If it's meant to enhance focus, it doesn't... but for the price, this thing is awesome.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2024
Works ok. Just what I needed.
Kay
Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2024
came as a part of a set i ordered. and it works, so i am happy. decent weight to it
RP
Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2024
I ran across the HURYSIN brand for the first time about six months ago, and opted to order their ED 8x33 binoculars. Based on my experience with them, it seemed like an easy choice to also get the 8x33 monocular for use when more portability is needed.Compared against a sub-$300 non-ED 12x52 monocular, this comparatively-tiny contender holds its own. I was expecting better low-light performance due to the ED glass (and it delivers there), but I was not expecting it to also pull ahead in sunny daytime conditions due to the drastic difference in the size of their respective objective lenses. Either provide a sharp image in bright light, but a direct A/B comparison proves that bigger isn't always better if the little guy is equipped with ED glass.Compared to its 8x33 HURYSIN binocular sibling, performance is as close as a monocular can hope to get with half the lenses. Aesthetically, however, the binocular model wins, and the monocular is left looking more like the dime-a-dozen low-quality monoculars that saturate Amazon, albeit with its superior performance intact. Structurally, the monocular is robust and doesn't feel cheap once in-hand, and the focus wheel is smooth and precise. I forgot to snap a picture for size comparison, so I'll mention that the monocular would fit [snugly] inside a 16 FL. OZ. drink can if you were to cut off the tapered top of the can.Only the lack of accessories at this price point keep me from rating this at five stars. Namely, the lack of a logical attachment method for the ocular lens cap (I had to get creative with the wrist strap), and the lack of a proper storage case -- while a drawstring bag is provided, I would have preferred even a cheap nylon case with flap and Velcro closure, such as is found with even $10 monoculars. Another reviewer suggests that this is worth $40, but I think its performance aligns with its $70 price tag, even if I'm a little bitter about storing it in a drawstring bag.
sonat
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2023
I have trouble adjusting regular binoculars to my eyes so I tried these that I just use one eye and works great.
Ted
Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2023
Bought this for hunting. Glassing hills 400-500yds away is a breeze. Simple,effective, clear and fast. Never going back to binox again.
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