


By Ron Spomer, Field Editor
No matter how good a product is, there’s always
room at the top. Just as competition pushes athletes to run faster
and jump higher, it drives optics manufacturers to pursue higher
resolution, more light transmission, more contrast, less flare .
. . in short, optical perfection. And they’re coming close.
Nikon, long known for superior camera lenses, has parlayed its optical
precision into some of the best scopes and binoculars in the world,
but has never quite been on par with the best of the best European
glass—or so say some. Many who have studied the view through a Nikon
Premier binocular in recent years describe it as world class, easily
hanging with the likes of Leica, Zeiss and Swarovski. Nevertheless,
Nikon must have decided it needed an edge on the competition, so
this year it introduced the EDG (Extra-low Dispersion Glass) binocular
line.
The Science
ED lenses minimize color fringing, an artifact of bent light. White
light diverges into all the colors of the rainbow after passing
through curved glass. Bringing each band back to perfect focus
is essential to creating a sharp, properly colored image. If any
wavelength (color) is slightly out of focus, it creates a halo
that’s most easily seen at high-contrast edges, such as dark antlers
against a bright sky or light antlers against a shady background.
If you want to be certain there’s a 2-inch sticker off a buck’s
G3, ED glass can help, especially at high magnifications. Generally
15X is considered the sticking point. Before that most folks can’t
detect color fringing. It’s still there, but subtle. Above 15X,
fringing becomes much more noticeable, which is why ED, HD and
other apochromatic types of glass are used on the best spotting
scopes—and also why these scopes are so costly. Nikon is betting
enough hunters will notice enough difference at 8X and 10X to make
EDG binoculars a hit. Nikon’s EDG advertising promotes “brilliant,
color-corrected images that are extremely bright, razor sharp and
free of flare.”

ED glass alone won’t deliver all that, of course, but it’s aided
by Nikon’s best anti-reflection multi-coatings on all lenses, phase-corrected
prisms and the latest, high-tech dielectric-coated prism mirrors.
All this produces maximum light transmission, flare control and color
fidelity. Those are ingredients common to all the world’s best and
brightest optics. The only differences to my knowledge are the proprietary
multi-coating recipes each manufacturer jealously guards and the
precision with which they put instruments together. The fact that
Nikon produces some of the world’s finest photographic lenses lends
a strong aura of possibility to its binoculars.
In addition to optical quality, EDG focuses on durability, functionality
and ergonomics, starting with a light, magnesium alloy body wrapped
in stippled “rubber armor” for a sure grip. Rubberized rings on the
objective barrel rims quietly absorb bumps and resist slipping on
slick surfaces. Similar rubber on the eyepiece edges protect eyeglasses
and soften the press against your occipital ridge. Eyepieces twist
up and lock solidly into three positions—and they do not collapse
under pressure.
The knurled, rubber-coated central focus knob turns smoothly with
one finger, but stiffly enough to prevent most accidental movement.
It pulls up to expose the diopter adjustment ring underneath, which
is stiff to prevent accidental movement, which is a good thing considering
how easily the focus knob pops up. In this position it is disengaged,
so the focus doesn’t change, but it’s distracting. I’d like to see
some sort of mechanical block to keep the focus knob engaged until
the user intentionally lifts it. Users seldom change diopter settings,
unless they’re sharing a binocular during field use.
“Thumb-position Memory Contours” have been molded into the barrels,
but I found these too shallow and set too low for my preferred hold,
which is fairly close to the eyepieces so that I can steady the binocular
by pressing thumbs against my nose and cheeks.
Echoing the look of the Swarovski EL line, the EDG uses two hinges,
fore and aft, to join its barrels. This is lighter than a full-length
hinge, stronger than a central hinge and leaves space for a comfortable
grip. I was able to stick two fingers between the EDG hinges, one
less than fit between my Swarovski EL hinges. Ergonomic distinctions
are subjective, but one notices them when making direct comparisons.
The Field Test
As for function, the 10x42 EDG passed with flying colors, surviving
15 minutes underwater with no leaks, even as all controls were
manipulated. Nikon rates waterproof depth as 16.4 feet, equal to
a Leica BR and 3 feet deeper than the Swarovski EL. There was no
internal fogging after taking the instrument from the freezer into
room temperature. Complicated engineering using seven lens elements
in the eyepiece gives this EDG a 6.5-degree angle of view and the
widest field of view in its class—341 feet at 1,000 yards, 5 to
11 feet more than the equivalent Zeiss, Swarovski and Leica. At
18mm, EDG eye relief beats the others by 2 or 3 mm.
To check for optical performance, I compared the EDG to a Swarovski
10x42 EL and Nikon 10x42 Monarch ATB. The differences were subtle
and minimal. The EDG seemed to match the Swarovski in brightness,
color fidelity, contrast and edge sharpness and came within a hair
of equaling its resolution. While alternating between each instrument
to study the same scene, I sometimes felt the Swarovski a smidge
brighter, sometimes the Nikon—ditto for contrast. Color seen through
the EDG seemed slightly cooler. Under the light of a full moon at
5 a.m., the EDG clearly revealed single stems of bleached, winter
grass against dark boulders at 80 yards. Had there been a deer on
the hillside, I felt I could have not only seen it, but possibly
counted antler tines.
To my surprise and Nikon’s credit, my old Monarch held its own against
the EDG in most categories, proving once again that quality differences
near the top end can be so small that some viewers may not detect
them. Still, if you demand the best, the EDG may have the edge. Give
it a close look and see for yourself.
NRA members,
if you already receive American Rifleman or America's
1st Freedom you can add American Hunter
to your reading list for just $9.95,
by calling 877-672-2000.
Nikon EDG
800-645-6687
Nikonusa.com
Type: roof-prism binocular
Magnification: 8X, 10X (tested)
Objective Lens Diameter: 42mm
Focusing Range: 9.84'–infinity
Eye Relief: 18mm
Twilight Factor: 17.6
FOV @ 1,000 yards: 374'
Weight: 29.5 ozs.
Dimensions: 5.4" wide, 5.94" high
Coatings: fully multi-coated lenses, phase-coated prisms, dielectric mirrors
Construction: magnesium chassis, black armor coating
Accessories: deluxe neck strap, case, detachable extra eyecups, lens covers
MSRP: $1,999