I shut my right eye, and focus for the left, then I shut my left eye and
adjust the diopter for my right. Usually the dipoter setting ends up
close to zero. I have actually become quite quick at diopter setting,
as my first binoculars were crappy ones that required different settings
for different distances!
The problem is that every now and then I find it's wrong (but hasn't
slipped). So I go through the procedure and fix it. The setting ends
up a bit to the right of zero. Then a little while later I have to put
it back again. From this I deduce that one lens moves a little on my
eye, then moves back. I will experiment with blinking to try to fix it
instead.
Peter Shute
Dave Torr wrote on Wednesday, 10 October 2007 4:19 PM:
> Seems you are not adjusting your lens settings correctly. The
> technique is to see which lens has the diopter setting. If it
> is the right one then close your right eye and focus on a
> distant object. Then close left eye (and open right one) and
> refocus using ONLY the diopter setting. This should then be
> fine in all conditions (until it gets knocked!)
==============================www.birding-aus.org
birding-aus.blogspot.com
To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to:
=============================
|