As above really, why doesn’t nightvision rifle scopes have optical zoom just like a slr camera? Even the top end rifle scopes are very pixelated at high magnification. Surely this can be done?
It could be done but I'd bet you wouldn't pay the money they would need to charge for a digital scope to have optical zoom
You can have optical zoom on an NV spotter (e.g PARD NV019)
But if you put an SLR type zoom lens in front of a digital sensor it will not hold zero throughout the full range of magnifications the lens can produce
As has been said, when the Yukon Photon appeared, some clever guys figured out that the existing 50mm objective lens (x5 magnification) could be replaced with an SLR zoom lens with the same thread (Probably M42)
There was a bit of a rush to buy zoom lenses with focal lengths up to around 135mm
At 135mm the magnification of the Photon was around x14 - and no pixellation - great!!!
The problem was that the scope could only be zeroed with the lens at one selected focal length. As soon as the focal length was changed, the zero shifted
And therin lies the root of the problem - making a zoom lens that holds zero throughout its full range of focal lengths
Holding zero is not a feature required of camera lenses so they continue to be produced at reasonable prices
Nerdy bit coming up - so avoid if you wish
Most digital scopes (day/night and thermal) have objective lenses that can be adjusted to get a focussed image at different distances
If you look closely, as the focus ring is turned, the lens moves backwards and forwards - but does not rotate.
Also, these are fairly simple lens assemblies with only 2 or 3 elements, so as long as there is no rotation of the lens elements relative to each other or to the sensor they can be made relatively economically with no noticeable change of zero as the focus is adjusted
Zoom lenses are much more complicated - they have anything up to 11 or 13 glass elements, some of which rotate relative to each other as the focal length of the lens is varied
If we imagine a single light ray from the centre of a target entering the exact centre of the front of the first element of the lens assembly then, if the lens is perfect, that light ray will exit from the exact centre at the rear of the lens and then enter the exact centre of the next lens in the lens assembly. If the second lens is perfect, the light ray will exit the exact centre of the rear of that lens. That process would be repeated through each element of the lens assembly with the light ray eventually exiting the exact centre of the final element of the lens assembly and then hitting a single point on the sensor
Unfortunately perfect lenses don't exist (although you can pay a lot of money to get them arbitrarily close to perfect) so that the light ray exiting each lens element will not be in the exact centre of the lens and not at exactly 90 degrees to the axis of the lens. That means that the light ray enters the next lens slightly off axis and that error will increase as the light ray passes through more and more elements
If the individual lens elements do not rotate relative to each other, it is possible to get the errors in each lens to somewhat cancel out leaving only a very small fixed error when the light leaves the final element of the lens
When individual lens elements rotate relative to each other, all bets are off because there is no way to know exactly where a light ray coming out of a lens that rotates will actually enter the next element in the lens, making impossible to know where a light ray entering the front of the lens will actually hit the sensor when it exits the lens
For digital scope manufacturer, the choice is either an extremely expensive optical zoom lens or digital zoom which costs nothing to implement
You don't have to be Brain of Britain to know which option they all choose
Cheers
Bruce