Binocular
Prisms: Roof or Porro?
Binoculars today are available in two general
profiles, or shapes. These shapes are a function
of the type of prism system used in the
instrument.
Porro prism binoculars have the classic dog
leg shape with the eyepiece offset to the
one side with respect to the objective or front
lens. These are like a great horned
owlwide, bulky, and stout. They provide a
big, steady platform for observing and offer a
nice hand-filling package, especially for people
with large hands.
By contrast, roof prism binoculars have a
straight profile, with the eyepiece situated
directly behind the front lens. These are more
like a harriertrim, narrow, and straight.
This allows them to be held with arms tucked
close to the body for maximum steadiness. The
narrow profile of a roof prism also places
focusing wheels conveniently under the fingers,
which enhances focusing speed and comfort,
especially for people with smaller hands.
The difference between these two prism types is
obvious when you handle them, and many shoppers
choose one or the other largely on the basis of
comfort and cost. This is fine for the casual
user, but performance-conscious birders,
especially those with a limited budget, need to
take a closer look at prism type. There are
optical differences.
The function of a prism in a binocular or
spotting scope is to provide a properly oriented
image. Prisms are expensive, but without them a
binocular would always produce upside-down,
reversed images, challenging even the most
skilled birder.
Porro prisms, the older design, are physically
wider than long. When viewed from the side, they
direct light along a path that is folded into
something akin to a square S shape. If the prisms
are of quality glass and aligned correctly, there
is very little light loss or degradation of the
image. The only real disadvantage is the fact
that the prisms are large and bulky and
consequently require large housings.
Roof prisms, on the other hand, are a newer
design. They are smaller and more compact than
Porro prisms, and actually resemble a small house
with a peaked roof. This allows them to be fitted
into smaller housings, which makes for more
compact binoculars or spotting scopes.
However, standard roof prisms have several
inherent design difficulties. First, they are not
as bright as Porro prisms because they employ
mirror surfaces that lose some light. Second,
alignment is often more critical than in Porro
prisms; an alignment error a fraction of the
width of a human hair will degrade the image in a
roof prism. Securing them in binoculars is much
more of a challenge. Third, images are split and
then rejoined slightly out of phase when they
pass through such a prism. This produces an image
of slightly less resolution than an equal quality
Porro prism.
Thus we have a trade-off: the slight optical
superiority of the typical Porro prism versus the
comfort factor of the standard roof prism. Yes,
average quality Porro prisms tend to give a
sharper image than standard roof prisms. There is
a price to pay for comfort.
Technology, however, has come to the rescue of
the roof prism design. Enhanced coatings on some
roof prism mirror surfaces reduces light loss to
negligible levels. And even moderately priced
roof prisms are now housed in cages that make
them more secure than many Porro prisms. Best of
all, some new roof prisms have special coatings
that eliminate the phase problem. These
phase-corrected or PC roof prisms can deliver
images on a par with the best Porro prisms.
Thats the good news. The bad news is that
all this extra effort and attention doesnt
come cheap. PC roof prism binoculars from Bausch
& Lomb, Zeiss, Swarovski, and Leica are very
expensive, often more than $1,000, but they rank
as some of the finest instruments made. They are
truly the standard of excellence in binoculars
today. If you are a roof prism fan, you can now
have your cake and eat it too if you can afford
it.
If you cant, standard roof prism models of
at least average quality are still a good choice
for birding, as long as they have all the other
features of a good birding glass. But if you
demand the best in resolution and sharpness, keep
in mind that these roof prisms can only do so
much without phase correction. A birder whose
first concern is resolution must therefore pay
the price for a PC roof prism, or opt for a good
Porro prism.
In fact Porro prism binoculars remain the best
buy for your optical dollar, because they can do
anything a PC roof prism binocular can do, and at
a fraction of the cost. Its just plain
economicsit costs less to produce a Porro
prism binocular to the same optical standards as
PC roof prism binoculars. Consequently, if you
see two binoculars at the same price, one a Porro
prism and one a roof prism, it shouldnt be
too hard to predict which one has better optics.
This is especially important for
performance-conscious birders on a tight budget.
Inexpensive Porro prism binoculars today are much
better optically than inexpensive roof prism
models. If you must buy cheap, at least go with a
Porro.
Spotting scopes also use Porro and roof prisms,
but the overwhelming majority are Porro prisms,
because size is not such an issue with these
instruments. There are some exceptions, notably
small, compact roof prism scopes designed for
maximum portability, but these do not offer
interchangeable eyepiece capability. With the
exception of large European drawtube scopes, all
the premium, full-feature, large-objective scopes
on the market today use Porro prisms.
There are other optical systems used in spotting
scopes that deserve attention. These dual-purpose
instruments can be used for birding by day and
for astronomy by night.
Small, high-quality astronomical refractors are
becoming popular with birders for their
versatility and exceptional optics. This type of
scope is basically the same as a standard Porro
prism spotting scope, but the Porro or erecting
prism is detachable (not needed for astronomy).
In addition to superbly corrected optics, these
scopes offer virtually any combination of eye
relief, magnification, and field of view, as
astronomical eyepieces are all industry
standardized according to a few basic barrel
diameters. Thus, any brand of scope here can use
eyepieces from a dozen or more manufacturers.
There are also small, compact scopes on the
market that use a combination of mirrors and
lenses. These are technically known as
catadioptric scopes, and there are several design
variations. Most of the smaller ones are the
Maksutov design, which requires a high degree of
workmanship to produce a decent optic.
Traditionally, this has meant a very high price
tag, but new computerized production techniques
have produced some new models at reasonable
prices.
The chief advantage of these scopes is their
short tube length relative to their aperture.
This makes them amazingly compact, although they
are not as rugged or as durable as typical Porro
prism spotting scopes. They do, however, use
astronomical eyepieces and photographic adapters,
which makes them very versatile observing tools.
Visit Shaw
Creek Bird Supply and see our
wide selection of Audubon
Binoculars.
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