when you're going small, while the Kowa's are nice, they don't use the fluorite in their glass, it's only ED. at a store I used to work at, when we went below 80mm, we turned to the Nikon Fieldscopes. They're not cheap...but if weight and light gathering power/throughput is important, you do yourself a disservice not looking through them.
Fluorite "schmorlite"!
From Nikons website...
ED
ED glass — an essential element of NIKKOR telephoto lenses
Nikon developed ED (Extra-low Dispersion) glass to enable the production of lenses that offer superior sharpness and color correction by minimizing chromatic aberration.
Put simply, chromatic aberration is a type of image and color dispersion that occurs when light rays of varying wavelengths pass through optical glass. In the past, correcting this problem for telephoto lenses required special optical elements that offer anomalous dispersion characteristics — specifically calcium fluoride crystals.
However, fluorite easily cracks and is sensitive to temperature changes that can adversely affect focusing by altering the lens’ refractive index.
So Nikon designers and engineers put their heads together and came up with ED glass, which offers all the benefits, yet none of the drawbacks of calcium fluorite-based glass. With this innovation, Nikon developed several types of ED glass suitable for various lenses.
They deliver stunning sharpness and contrast even at their largest apertures. In this way, NIKKOR’s ED-series lenses exemplify Nikon’s preeminence in lens innovation and performance.
Its about design, glasses chosen, lens grind (spherical or aspheric) optical centering, mechanical stability and accuracy etc etc .... apochromats are so called because ..
.far far too much to go into here!! Suffice to say ... KOWA makes a very good scope (as does Nikon, Swarovski, Leitz etc etc)