Binoculars with Range Finder, Model Turact 8x24 Zeiss Nedinsco Systeem 's-Gravenhage, 1921

Binoculars with Range Finder, Model Turact 8x24 Zeiss Nedinsco Systeem 's-Gravenhage, 1921

Turact model 8x24 rangefinder binoculars made by Zeiss Systeem Nedinsco in 's-Gravenhage in 1921, equipped with a rangefinder that can be inserted via a knurled lever on the right eyepiece on which two image-splitting bifocal lenses are placed.

On the body of the binoculars there are two plates showing numbers translated into meters, then on the left the figure of the soldier on foot while on the right the soldier on horseback, through which it is possible to calculate the distance of the enemy from the observation point.

The binoculars are in excellent condition, the vision is clear and collimated and all the mechanisms work correctly. It is also complete with its original leather case.


Nedinsco (Ned-Ins-Co in Dutch "Dutch Instrumentation Company") was founded in 1921 by Carl Zeiss of Jena following an acquisition of an old disused factory, located in the city of Venlo, Holland. Thanks to a man, Franz Kaumanns, who sympathized with Germany, Carl Zeiss managed to avoid the restrictions imposed in the Treaty of Versailles, in which Germany was not allowed to produce war material for its army; Article 168-170 in fact imposed rigorous controls on the production of war material and the consequent export.

In the same year the production of rangefinders, periscopes and signal lamps for military use began.

In 1921 Franz Kaumanns, as delegate representative of Carl Zeiss in the Netherlands, opened the corporate and representative headquarters in the city of Gravenhage.

In 1923, Zeiss entrusted the architect Hans Schlag with the task of designing the expansion of the factory, building a tower suitable for aligning the optical instruments and calibrating them over longer distances, focusing on the bell towers of Venlo, which this city boasted a large number of them.

In 1944 the factory was destroyed by a violent bombing.

After World War II, Nedinsco became an independent company.


Carl Zeiss takes its name from its founder, Carl Zeiss, who on November 17, 1846 chose the small town of Jena, in Thuringia, as the location for his precision optical equipment factory. Thanks to the severe quality control that Carl Zeiss imposed on his products, going so far as to personally destroy the microscopes that did not pass the tests, the newly formed Zeiss became the official supplier of the University of Jena and received the gold medal of the industrial exhibition in 1861 of Thuringia as the best research instrument produced in Germany, awarded to the Stand I microscope of 1857. In 1866 the thousandth microscope was produced and the name Zeiss became known in all European scientific circles. Thanks to studies on the Porro prism, in 1893 Abbe patented double prism binoculars, which accentuated the perception of depth.

The mass production of Zeiss binoculars began in 1894, already at the beginning of the twentieth century more than 30,000 were made, at the beginning of the First World War the quota had risen to 500,000 and, at the end of the Second World War, as many as 2,260,000 were produced binoculars for the civil and military market. Models were made starting from 4x11 mm to 12x40 mm, up to real giants such as the 80 mm and 100 mm. Thanks to studies conducted on the perception of light in low light situations, it was demonstrated that the average dilation of the pupil in an adult is approximately 7 mm. For this reason, the 7x50 mm model was introduced in 1910 and remained on the market until 1917 with few changes to the materials used.

In 1926, following the post-war crisis of the First World War with the Treaty of Versailles which bankrupted many important German companies, Zeiss purchased "C.P. GOERZ" and founded Zeiss Ikon in 1926. In 1937 Zeiss had commercial contacts and factories in more than 29 countries around the world. From '33 Zeiss acquired interest from the Nazi regime, which balanced production towards military instruments. It successfully produced binoculars with wide-angle optics for military use, pressure-resistant optical systems for U-boats, periscope binoculars for targeting tanks. Furthermore, Zeiss cameras were mounted on the V2s for remote sensing operations of the English coasts.

On 1 November 1935, Zeiss, in the figure of Alexander Smakula, patented a process for the treatment of optical glass with extraordinary results in terms of light transmission. Remained a military secret until 1939, it was adopted on binoculars to reduce ghost images and internal reflections. During the Second World War, there were numerous bombings against the Zeiss factories.

Jena was bombed several times by the Allies starting in 1944. Stuttgart was razed to the ground, although the Contessa-Nettel factory suffered little damage. The bombing of Dresden, in addition to devastating the city, also caused considerable damage to the Zeiss Ikon headquarters.

On April 13, 1945, American military forces entered Jena, surprising themselves that the bombing had not caused any significant damage. The main planetarium was in ruins, while the factories remained operational.

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