When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: miranda binoculars 16 x 50

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Miranda Camera Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miranda_Camera_Company

    The Miranda Camera Company (ミランダカメラ㈱) , originally named the Orion Camera K.K. (オリオンカメラ㈱) in 1955 and Orion Seiki Sangyō Y.K. (オリオン精機産業有限会社) in 1947, manufactured cameras in Japan between 1955 (70 years ago) () and 1976 (49 years ago) (). Their first camera was the Miranda T.

  3. Research Enterprises Limited - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_Enterprises_Limited

    One of REL's more popular products was their 7 × 50 military binoculars. Research Enterprises Limited (REL for short) was a short-lived Toronto-based Crown Corporation that built electronics and optical instruments during World War II.

  4. Tasco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tasco

    Tasco imports binoculars with magnifications ranging between seven and ten power. They also offer Snapshot series binoculars, which include an ability to record video and capture still pictures as seen through the binoculars. Users can transfer images to a computer via a USB cable. Tasco provides software for viewing and printing photographs ...

  5. Binoculars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binoculars

    [14] [15] In 1897 Moritz Hensoldt began marketing pentaprism based roof prism binoculars. [16] Most roof prism binoculars use either the Schmidt–Pechan prism (invented in 1899) or the Abbe–Koenig prism (named after Ernst Karl Abbe and Albert König and patented by Carl Zeiss in 1905) designs to erect the image and fold the optical path ...

  6. Opera glasses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opera_glasses

    Often, modern theatre binoculars are equipped with an LED flashlight, which makes it easier to find a place in the dark. In addition to the more stereotypical binocular type, folding opera glasses were another common design. They were made mostly of metal and glass, with a leatherette cover for grip and color.

  7. Leica Camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leica_Camera

    Barnack resorted to a Leitz Mikro-Summar 1:4.5/42 mm lens for the prototype, but to achieve resolution necessary for satisfactory enlargement, the 24x36 mm format needed a lens designed specially for it. The first Leica lens was a 50 mm f /3.5 design based on the Cooke triplet of 1893, adapted by Max Berek at Leitz. The lens has five elements ...