The Nocs Provisions Field Issue 8×42 is the newest model in the Nocs lineup — positioned between the Field Issue 32mm compacts and the Pro Issue 42mm full-sizes, marketed as Nocs' 'smallest full-sized binocular to date.' At $200, it delivers a full 42mm objective lens for maximum light gathering in a lighter, more compact housing than the Pro Issue, with the same No-Matter-What lifetime warranty and IPX7 waterproofing.
The key distinction from the Pro Issue 8×42 ($299): the Field Issue uses multi-coated rather than phase-coated prisms. Phase correction improves contrast and color fidelity — it's a real optical upgrade that's most visible in challenging light. In good daylight, most users won't notice the difference. At $200, the Field Issue 8×42 is a compelling option for birders who want full 42mm light gathering in a compact-leaning body at a mid-range price. For serious birding in varied conditions, the Pro Issue's phase coating is worth the $99 upgrade.
The Field Issue 8×42 is the most recently launched binocular in the Nocs lineup, announced in early 2026. It fills a gap in the lineup that users had noticed: a full-size 42mm binocular that's lighter and more compact than the Pro Issue, at a lower price, for birders who want 42mm light gathering without everything the Pro Issue offers.
The result is positioned squarely between the Field Issue 32mm and the Pro Issue 42mm — a compact-leaning full-size that delivers the brightness advantage of 42mm optics with a body that's meaningfully lighter and smaller than the Pro Issue. GearJunkie, one of the first publications to test the production model, called it 'great low-light optics and durability at an astounding price for $200,' noting that 'the size, weight, build, and clarity rival much more expensive optics.'
The single most important technical difference between the Field Issue 8×42 and the Pro Issue 8×42 is prism coating: the Field Issue uses multi-coated BaK4 prisms; the Pro Issue uses phase-coated BaK4 prisms. Phase correction is an additional coating applied to roof prism surfaces that corrects light wave interference patterns, improving contrast and resolution — particularly in low light and when looking at high-contrast subjects against bright backgrounds.
In practice: in good daylight, most birders at most skill levels won't notice a meaningful difference. In forest shade, at dusk, or when studying fine field marks on distant birds, the Pro Issue's phase correction delivers a cleaner, more detailed image. The Field Issue is the right choice if you do most of your birding in good light. The Pro Issue is worth the $99 upgrade if you bird regularly in challenging conditions.
The Field Issue 8×42 at $200 is most compelling as a first full-size Nocs binocular for the birder who doesn't yet want to commit to the Pro Issue's price, or as a rugged second pair for situations where the Pro Issue would be at risk. It's also the obvious choice if you specifically want the most compact full-size 42mm Nocs makes.
The upgrade path is clear: Field Issue 8×42 ($200) → Pro Issue 8×42 ($299, phase-coated, slightly heavier) → other brands' 8×42 at $429–$999. At every step there are meaningful optical improvements. The Field Issue 8×42 is an honest instrument at an honest price — it does what it claims, and Nocs backs it for life.
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