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Brunton 26DNL-CL Mirrored Compass - 2007 BCS

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26DNL-CL Mirrored Compass
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The mirrored Brunton Avalanche Compass adds another arrow to your quiver of avalanche-detecting techniques. Brunton gave this compass a slope degree indicator to help you decide which face is most likely to slide and which face is more likely to remain stable. A sighting mirror ensures accurate readings. And snow won't damage the weather-tight Avalanche Compass.

Bottom Line: Head into the snowy backcountry with the deck stacked in your favor. Educate yourself and have all the tools of the trade at your disposal. The Brunton Avalanche Compass is one of those tools.

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Rating for this product: 2

Not worth it

By:
January 6, 2012

Last month, I bought Brunton's 26DNL-CL and have not been too impressed. Two problems: one small and one huge.
1) The clinometer needs to be cajoled into vertical (i.e. with more cajoling than what feels accurate). On northerly aspects the compass needle tends to go near vertical (aligning with the magnetosphere) and this gets in the way of the clinometer (which only goes to 60°).
2) The worst feature of this compass is the hinge design which attaches the sighting mirror to the baseplate. The baseplate and the top are one piece of molded plastic with two folded slivers of plastic functioning as a 'hinge.' The problem is a lack of torsional rigidity between the top and the baseplate.
(*I know this sounds like nit-picky minutiae but hear me out*).
To take the bearing of a feature (like a distant peak), you adjust the compass-housing & mirror with one hand and while holding the baseplate with the other; keeping the mirror steady with the thumb. Minimal torsional rigidity means the mirror rotates through more than one axis in relation to the baseplate. I.e. The v-sight & centerline of the mirror are not true with the direction of travel arrow on the baseplate & index pointer on the compass housing (because you keep the angle of the mirror steady with slight pressure from your thumb, thereby torquing lid slightly). When you use the mirror to take a bearing (aligning your eye with the index pointer through the centerline of the mirror), you end up rotating the whole compass to compensate so the peak is aligned with how the lines appear in the mirror; yielding a false reading when you use the v-sight, or the mirror as a guide when you rotate the compass housing.

Bottom line: Brunton's 26DNL-CL is inaccurate as a sight compass while awkward and lacking in standard features as a baseplate compass.

If you need a sighting compass, spend the extra money to get a compass with all the features (adjustable declination and clinometer) and a decent hinge like the Brunton 15TDCL.
http://www.backcountry.com/brunton-15tdcl-mirrored-compass
Otherwise save your money and weight and get a nice baseplate compass like K&R's Horizon Map Compass.
http://www.backcountry.com/kasper-richter-horizon-map-compass

I'm so glad Backcountry is 'out of stock' for this item.

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does this compass have adjustable declination?

does this compass have adjustable declination?

By:
December 12, 2008

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No,not adjustable it has a declination scale.

By:
January 12, 2009

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Rating for this product: 4

Small and light

By:
November 21, 2008

Nice compass, very small and light. I'm a little worried that the hinge, which is just a thin piece of plastic that bends, could break with use, so we'll see about that. The slope-angle device works well. A great skiing/backcountry compass.

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Rating for this product: 5

Great compass

By:
April 10, 2009

Nice, simple and easy to use. The declination scale works well and seems easier and quicker to use than turning the tiny screws for the adjustable declination compasses. The clinometer is nice for a little accuracy on slope angle when you're curious beyond the eyeball guess and don't want to set your poles up to get a slope angle. I'm not sure how long the plastic lid with the mirror will remain attached but otherwise the compass is small, simple, and inexpensive, great little tool to add for your snowpits too.

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Change me.

Out of Stock

Item: BRU0176

2007 Model No Longer Available

We have a lot more Compasses than that

Compasses

Not worth it

2 star rating

By: Hans Ludwig January 6, 2012

Last month, I bought Brunton's 26DNL-CL and have not been too impressed. Two problems: one small and one huge.
1) The clinometer needs to be cajoled more...

Small and light

4 star rating

By: Tom Runcie November 21, 2008

Nice compass, very small and light. I'm a little worried that the hinge, which is just a thin piece of plastic that bends, could break with use, so more...

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Declination adjustable:
Yes 
Global needle:
No 
Sighting hole:
Yes 
Sighting mirror:
Yes 
Buoyant:
Yes 
Magnified readout:
No 
Bubble level:
No 
Slope meter:
Avalanche / slope indicator in degree and percent 
Digital:
No 
Backlight:
No 
Battery type:
None 
Battery life:
N / A 
Low battery indicator:
N / A 
Size:
2.7 x 2.4 x .7in 
Recommended use:
Backcountry skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing 
Weight:
1.2oz 
Warranty:
Limited lifetime 
Country of Origin:
Sweden