Basic binocular and camera setup – Bushnell ImageView 11-0833 User Manual

Page 7

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7

Basic Binocular and Camera Setup

Before you begin using it, you’ll probably want to take a few moments to set up the ImageView for your

individual eyesight and user preferences. Leave the rubber eyecups in their “up” position if you are not

wearing glasses, or roll them down if you are. Grasp the left and right sides of the binocular, and pull them

apart or push them together while looking through the binocular to adjust the eyepiece spacing until your

view is a single circular image. Find a distant object with fine detail (tree, sign, brick wall, etc), and adjust the

center focus knob until the object appears sharp when viewed through the left binocular eyepiece only. Then,

looking at the same object through just the right side of the binocular, simply rotate the right eyepiece until

the image is equally sharp for your right eye. This is called the diopter adjustment, and compensates for any

difference in sight between your left and right eyes. Once set during this initial procedure, you can leave the

diopter adjustment alone and just use the center focus knob to bring objects at any distance into sharp focus

through the binoculars (the minimum focus distance is about 15 feet).

Your digital photos and videos are not affected by the center focus knob, as the camera lens located

between the binocular’s objective lenses does not require focusing. It is preset so that objects ranging from

approximately 50 feet and farther away will be in focus. Note that the binocular is capable of focusing closer

than the camera. Check the live preview image on the LCD display to make sure you are far enough away to

ensure sharp photos. The camera lens provides 8x magnification, which is the same as the binocular’s optics,

and is aligned so that and object centered in the binocular’s view will also be centered in your photos or

videos. Therefore, it is not necessary to have the LCD turned on or even raised while you are shooting photos

or videos. Reducing use of the LCD will extend battery life significantly. Pressing the Display button will turn

the LCD screen off but leave the camera powered on, ready to take photos anytime you press SNAP.

You may want to go into the camera’s main menu and set the correct date before using the camera for the first

time, since the date stamp (imprint) feature is turned on by default (but can be defeated if you wish). Please

refer to Step 4 under “Basic Setup” for details.

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