Fujinons are terrific.
In 1993, we bought a pair of Fujinon Polaris 7x50 with lighted compass. It has rubberized coating, and floats. It is a bit on the heavy side for my wife, but for me it is fine. To clean it, you just dunk it in fresh water, use some mild soap, and rinse. We liked it so much, that in 2000 we bought a 2nd one. It is a Fujinon Mariner 7x50 with lighted compass. It also has rubberized coating, and floats. It is much lighter. And also cleans up using soap and water.They have great warranty, lifetime for the Polaris, and 5 year for the Mariner. We got a compass bubble on the Polaris after 10 years of use. We sent it back, and they repaired it and gave it an overall cleaning and adjustment. Great service.We love the compasses. It is so much easier to tell the other person to “look at a eagle at 123 degrees”, then to say “look at the eagle that is sitting on the 2nd tree to the right of that white rock, no no no, not that white rock, it is the other white rock” :{Both of these binocs does not need to be focused once it is adjusted to your eyes. In fact, it does not even have a focusing knob or toggle. It is always in focus. I have heard some people complain that “what if two people want to share the binoc, then you will have to readjust the eyepiece all the time”. Well, I don’t agree with that thinking. Both my wife and I use the same binoc, and we don’t ever have to readjust the eyepiece. We both wear contacts, and sometimes glasses. That means we are both 20-20, or very close to it. So when the bonoc’s eyepiece is adjusted, it fits us both. I want to focus it only once right after purchase, and then forget it for life. Everything is sharply focused, all the time. It is the only way to go.We also have used and owned other binocs, all with center focus, and we just don't use them anymore. Center focus, or any focus, is a pain. Especially on a rocking boat. I would highly recommend either of these Fujinon binocs.