Product Details
Vivitar 7 x 50 Binoculars

Vivitar 7 x 50 Binoculars
From Vivitar

List Price: $49.99
Price: $13.89 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

24 new or used available from $7.18

Average customer review:

Product Description

Zoom in on the action with Vivitar's 7 x 50 binocular set. These binoculars offer magnification seven times more powerful than the natural eye. These binoculars also feature ruby coated UV optics for glare-free viewing. Get rugged durability along with Vivitar's high-quality optical performance.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #40816 in Sports & Outdoors
  • Brand: Vivitar
  • Model: 1615663
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 7.30" w x 3.00" l, 3.52 pounds

Features

  • Magnification 7 times more powerful than the naked eye
  • Ruby coated UV optics for glare-free viewing
  • Perfect for sporting events, nature watching, sightseeing and much more
  • Comes complete with soft, protective carrying pouch with shoulder strap
  • Convenient neck strap

Customer Reviews

BAD QUALITY1
Purchased because of very low price and 7x50 spec. I didn't expect great quality at this price, but did expect them to be useable. First one produced double vision. Took it back to Walgreens for another. The 2nd one has single vision but focus was so poor that I couldn't read a small distant sign that was absolutely clear with my other brand (low cost) 7x50.

Vivitar should be ashamed of themselves for selling such low grade trash. If you are tempted to buy these, go to a store where you can test a few and pick the best one.

Truly educational, but not in the way they intended1
Oh man, these are trash. I picked up a pair at the local drugstore on a radical discount, just to see. They were so far out of alignment that even when I could get the images to merge, convex objects looked concave. Guaranteed to induce headaches. Then there's the mushy focusing, and the chromatic aberration on bright objects. Finally, the view is noticeably dimmer than in my 7x35s, which shouldn't happen with double the light-gathering area on the objective lenses (pi*35*35=3846 square mm; pi*50*50=7850 square mm). My guess is that the manufacturer should have passed on the "UV coating" and added some coatings to enhance light transmission, like you find on decent binoculars. If they'd done that, though, these would sell for more than the cost of a movie ticket (hint: don't pay any more than that for them!).

So I disassembled one side. Now I have a 7x50 monocular with all of the problems listed above except the misalignment, plus a cheap eyepiece for my travel telescope, two cool prisms to play with, and one lousy lens that I have no idea what to do with. So as a bag of parts to tinker with, this was a good buy *at the ridiculous discount I got*, but at anything more than that, or as a functional piece of optics that you can use for more than two minutes without getting a migraine, these should be avoided.

Poor Quality Control1
I purchased and returned this product twice and then gave up and got a refund. In my opinion, either the product is defective or is packaged poorly. Both times the binoculars exhibited double vision. I was surprised that a Vivitar product would perform so poorly.