
ENTER AND DOWNLOAD STELLARIUM FOR FREE Question : Can I attach a DSLR camera to this telescope? What accessories are needed?
Answer: Of course YES, you can connect a DSLR camera to this or any other telescope. You will need a projection adapter and a T2 ring appropriate for your DSLR camera (there are 5 DSLR camera mount standards: Canon EOS, Nikon, Olympus E, Petax K and Sony Alfa / Minolta AF). These adapters are available in our online store in the astronomy accessories section.
Question : Can I attach a compact camera to this telescope? What accessories are needed?
Answer: Of course you can. You can find a suitable shelf for compact cameras in the astronomy accessories section of our online store ( universal adapter for digital compact cameras ).
Question : Can a HYBRID camera (a large compact SLR-sized camera) be attached to this telescope? What accessories are needed?
Answer: You can try this, but it is not recommended. So-called hybrids are not very good for astrophotography, because they do not have the option of taking off the lens like a SLR, and they are large and have large lenses, which means that shelf systems cannot be used, and the vignetting is high, because you cannot get the lens very close to the last optical surface of the telescope eyepiece. We recommend buying a SLR 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 first, which will make both using the telescope and the observations themselves more conscious and easier. In addition, it is worth considering buying planetary contrast filters and solar filter foils (available in the astronomical accessories section).
Question : Can this telescope be used as a spotting scope/nature scope?
Answer: Yes, the offered telescope is an achromatic refractor, for which after using an angle connector ( included in the set ) we will obtain an uninverted, terrestrial image. Thanks to this, this telescope can be used as an observation telescope. It is worth remembering, however, that its main purpose is astronomical observations.
An astronomical telescope is usually a rather bulky viewing telescope. On the other hand, a spotting/viewing telescope will give correct images of only some astronomical objects, offering a compact, easily portable, often waterproof design.
Question : Can I observe both planets and nebulae with this telescope? Is this a city or country telescope?
Answer: All offered telescopes allow you to observe the planets of the Solar System (all of them) and nebulae, or more precisely galaxies, star clusters, emission nebulae, etc. A separate issue is the clarity of the details of the planets' surfaces and the number and brightness of nebulous objects. A smaller telescope has its own sky, a large one - its own, but we can always count on wonderful observations of the structures of the Moon's surface, the phases of Mercury and Venus, the disk of Mars, the belts on Jupiter and the four Galilean moons of Jupiter, the ring of Saturn and the disks of Uranus and Neptune. The brightest nebulae, such as the Great Andromeda Nebula M31, the Great Orion Nebula M42 or the globular cluster in Hercules M13 always delight, even a small telescope will show several dozen of the most beautiful nebulae. Finally, a telescope equipped with a solar filter can be used to observe spots on the Sun's disk.
There is no division into city and country telescopes, rather there are recommendations: if the telescope will be used mainly in the city, in conditions of city light pollution and high atmospheric instability (buildings give off heat at night, heating the air and the image starts to "float" like on hot days over a hot road!), then an achromatic refractor (lens telescope) or Maksutov (meniscus - mirror) is recommended. Our target will be mainly planets and compact objects. In turn, under pitch-black, country skies, it is worth using a Newtonian system telescope (mirror) with the largest possible mirror we can afford, because we can count on a more stable and clearer atmosphere and great possibilities for observing nebulae.
Question : Does this telescope include a tripod/mount?
Answer: Of course YES, every telescope has a mount unless it is described as OTA ( Optical Tube Assembly).
Question : You write that the telescope comes with assembly, does that mean you will come and assemble the telescope for me?
Answer: Mounting does not mean mounting , but a system for mounting the telescope tube. It must be understood that we never conduct observations "by hand" with an astronomical telescope - we must mount the telescope on a system that allows its precise setting to any region of the sky.
In the case of an equatorial (also called equatorial or equatorial) mount , the optical tube of the telescope is mounted on a tripod with a moving head that has two axes: the hour axis (right ascension axis) and the declination axis, corresponding to the coordinates of objects on the celestial sphere. Don't worry - it's not difficult, although the names may seem exotic at first. The equatorial mount has one axis (right ascension axis) set so that when the telescope rotates, it moves like the stars in the sky. At our latitudes, objects do not move in straight lines or circles (unlike at the poles, where they move in circles parallel to the horizon, or on the equator - where they rise and set always perpendicular to the horizon), but in arcs.
In practice, a properly set equatorial mount allows you to follow astronomical objects by moving the telescope in only one axis, allows you to take pictures of the sky with exposure times longer than a few seconds, and allows you to mount a clock drive/motor to compensate for the Earth's daily rotation. In short, an equatorial mount is a typical astronomical mount.