
ENJD- AND DOWNLOAD THE STELLARIUM PROGRAM FOR FREE Question : Can a digital SLR be connected to this telescope? What accessories are needed for this?
Answer: Of course, YES, you can connect a DSLR to that and any other telescope. What you need for this is: a projection connector and a T2 ring that is specific to your DSLR (there are 5 standards for DSLRs: Canon EOS, Nikon, Olympus E, Petax K and Sony Alfa / Minolta AF). These connectors are available in our online store in the astronomical accessories department.
Question : Can a compact camera be connected to this telescope? What accessories are needed for this?
Answer: Of course you can. A suitable shelf for compact cameras can be loaded in the department of astronomical accessories in our online store ( universal adapter for compact digital cameras ).
Question : Can the HYBREY camera (large compact camera and SLR camera) be connected to this telescope? What accessories are needed for this?
Answer: You can make such attempts, but this is not recommended. So-called hybrids do not work well in astrophotography, because they do not have the ability to remove the lens like a SLR camera, but they have large dimensions and large lenses, which makes the shelf systems ineligible, and the vignetting is large, because you can not bring the lens closer to the last optical surface of the telescope's eyepiece. We recommend buying a reflex camera or a cheap compact.
Question : What else is worth buying for this telescope?
Answer: The presented telescope is a complete set ready to conduct astronomical observations on the first clear night. As an addition, we recommend educational publications in the first place, which will make using both the telescope and the observations themselves more conscious and simpler. In addition, it is worth considering the purchase of contrastive planetary filters and foils for the solar filter (available in the astronomical accessories department).
Question : Can this telescope be used as a spotting scope / telescope for nature?
Answer: Yes, the telescope offered is an achromatic refractor, for which, after using the angled connector ( included in the set ), we will receive an uninverted, terrestrial image. Thanks to this, this telescope can be used as an observation telescope. However, it is worth remembering that its main purpose is astronomical observations.
The astronomical telescope is usually a bulky observation telescope. In turn, the observation / viewing telescope will give correct images of only some astronomical objects, offering a compact, easily portable, often waterproof construction.
Question : Can I observe both planets and nebulae through this telescope? Is this a telescope only to the city or just to the countryside?
Answer: All offered telescopes allow you to observe planets of the Solar System (all) and nebulae, or more precisely galaxies, star clusters, emission nebulae etc. A separate issue is the clarity of surface details of the planets and the number and brightness of nebular objects. The smaller telescope has its own sky, large - its own, but we can always count on great observations of the surface structure of the Moon, Mercury and Venus, Mars shield, Jupiter belts and Jupiter's Galilean four moons, Saturn's ring and Uranus and Neptune shields. The nebular nebulae, such as the Andromeda M31 Great Nebula, the Orion Nebula M42, or the globular cluster in M13, always delight, even a small telescope will reveal several dozen of the most beautiful nebulae. In the end, the telescope after equipping it with a solar filter can be used to observe spots on the Sun's target.
There is no division into telescopes to the city and, on the other hand , recommendations are more: if the telescope is used mainly in the city, in the conditions of pollution with urban light and high instability of the atmosphere (buildings emit heat at night, heating up the air and the image begin to "float" like in hot days over a hot road!), then an achromatic refractor (lens telescope) or Maksutov (meniscus - mirror) is recommended. Our goal will be mainly planets and compact objects. In turn, in the black, rural sky, it is worth to use the Newton's (mirror) telescope with the largest possible mirror as we can afford, because we can count on a more stable and more transparent atmosphere and great opportunities for observing the nebulae.
Question : Does this telescope have a tripod / assembly included?
Answer: Of course YES, each telescope has an assembly, unless it is described as OTA ( Optical Tube Assembly ).
Question : You write that the telescope is assembled, does it mean that you are coming and you will assemble the telescope for me?
Answer: Mounting does not mean mounting , but the telescope tube mounting system. It must be understood that we never conduct observations "by the hand" with the astronomical telescope - we must mount the telescope on the system enabling its precise positioning in any region of the sky.
In the case of a paralactic assembly (also called equatorial or equatorial) , the telescope's optical tube is mounted on a tripod with a moving head having two axes: hourly (res apescension) and declination corresponding to the coordinates of the objects on the blue sphere. Please do not worry - it's not difficult, although the names at the beginning may seem exotic. The paralactic assembly has one (right ascension) positioned so that the telescope moves like stars on the sky when rotated. On our geographical widths, objects do not move around straight lines or circles (unlike poles, where they move on districts parallel to the horizon, or on the equator - where they rise and always perpendicular to the horizon), but on curves .
In practice, correctly set parallactic assembly allows you to route behind astronomical objects by moving the telescope only in one axis, allows you to take pictures of the sky at times longer than a few seconds and allows you to mount a clock drive / motor to compensate for the daily rotation of the Earth . In short, the parallactic assembly is a typical astronomical assembly.