Hexavalent
International Hazard
Posts: 1564
Registered: 29-12-2011
Location: Wales, UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: Pericyclic
|
|
Microscopes
What is your opinion of this 'scope?
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/2000x-Binocular-Vet-Professional-C...
"Success is going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm." Winston Churchill
|
|
Endimion17
International Hazard
Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline
Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second
|
|
It seems to be quite cheap for the features it offers.
What do you need it for? This 2000x magnification is useful for counting bacteria. I suppose you know anything above 800x is not really showing
anything new due to the nature of the light itself...
I tend to be very careful with Asian companies. Things might look fine on the photos, but when you start working with the device, you notice things
that annoy. Sometimes it's bad quality material, sometimes it's the way stuff was put together. Sometimes it keeps loosing focus because the knobs
became loose and there's nothing you can do about it.
The fact they sell blue filter with the microscope says something about the quality. Those filters are used in low end microscopes to enhance views at
larger magnifications and to reduce the abberations. If the lenses were really great, such filters wouldn't be needed.
But if you're an entry level enthusiast, this is more than enough. After all, it's a binocular microscope for only £164.99.
|
|
kristofvagyok
National Hazard
Posts: 659
Registered: 6-4-2012
Location: Europe
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Too cheap to be true. Looks okay, but the quality what is offers can't be as good as they say.
I've got many optics for my camera, but what I have no problem with (no chromatic aberration, good performance, smooth focus ect.) usually says "made
in Japan" -and costs much more than what is "made in Thailand" "made in China" ect. These usually perform really-really bad. They look like a well
performed lens but when I shoot with them the picture looks bad.
165GBP is too low for a microscope like this, similar quality scopes with oculars and lenses usually costs 30x-50x this much.
Let's see the objectives what they offer: "Objectives: SEMI PLAN 4x, 10x, 40x Spring Loaded, 100x OIL SL"
Just the 40x apo plan oil immersion lens for Nikon microscopes -it is the "same" as the 40x semi plan offered by the indian company- strats at:
630GBP.
I would say that this 165GBP would go out through the window if you would purchase this "microscope".
I have a blog where I post my pictures from my work: http://labphoto.tumblr.com/
-Pictures from chemistry, check it out(:
"You can’t become a chemist and expect to live forever."
|
|
Hexavalent
International Hazard
Posts: 1564
Registered: 29-12-2011
Location: Wales, UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: Pericyclic
|
|
That's what I thought.
Endimion - I don't actually want this microscope - I already have an old, but superb (both optically and mechanically) Cooke Troughton & Simms
M1000 microscope - I was just curious on what others thought of this, and if they, like me, thought it was all too good to be true.
"Success is going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm." Winston Churchill
|
|