Description
A pair of vintage British BINO PRISM MkIV 6E/383 5×40 RAF WWII spotter binoculars with serial number 2996. These binoculars are in good working order.
Some Main Features:
Model: BINO PRISM MkIV 6E/383 5×40 spotter binoculars
Magnification: 5 x
Objective lens diameter: 40mm
Eye lens diameter: 17mm
Fixed focus (i.e., no need to adjust image focus while using the binoculars, an important feature for aircraft spotting, see note below).
Serial number: 2996
Dimensions (when binoculars fully open): 180mm (W) x 185mm (H) x 65mm (D)
Solid metal body construction with admiralty style thick layer of black paint protection.
Net weight: approx. 1.05 kg
Engraved on top left prism plate: BINO. PRISM. Mk IV. No.2996
Engraved on top right prism plate: 6E/383 B
Marked with the Ministry of Defence Broad Arrow
General wear and tear appropriate with age and services.
Comes with original leather neck strap.
Please see photos for further details.
Note: The binoculars are in good working condition with correct collimation and reasonably clean optics and nice images for their fixed focus design feature and age. No damage to the optics and to the body work.
The top prism cover can be opened by loosening the three fixing screws. This can open the cover together with the eyepiece barrel for cleaning and/or image adjustment when necessary.
For further technical information, while these fixed focus spotter binoculars allow their users such as aircraft pilots to quickly find targets in different distances, their image clarity is not as high as the binoculars with fine focus adjustment. This is a design feature of those fixed focus spotters in the old days.
According to some information from the web, the manufacture is Ross and the Model is “Bino. Prism Mk IV 6E/383 5×40”. The “B” marking on right prism cover indicates the optics are “bloomed”, i.e. coated, and the marking “6E/383” is a Royal Air Force stores code for this type of instrument. This is a fixed focus aircraft spotting and maritime reconnaissance including U-boat spotting binocular. It is reported but not confirmed that it was used by observers in Beaufighters and other nightfighters during WWII. The Mk.IV was built by Ross under Royal Air Force contract, introduced in 1941, and continued to be used at least into the 1960’s. It was succeeded by the 5×40 6E/392. It is the first British war-time binocular to employ coated lenses. According to a 1943 report by the Admiralty Research Laboratory, the x5 Mk. IV’s 8 mm exit pupil gave 10%, 15% and 25% “improvements” (in light transmission) under respectively half-moonlight, starlight and dark conditions compared to a 7X50 Admiralty Pattern 1900 (probably a Barr & Stroud CF41).
More information on How to identify or estimate the production dates of vintage binoculars.
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