Quote:
Originally Posted by Allan
It's very hard to get a steady image in the 15x70 when hand holding. They are quite heavy as well and I find after 5 minutes or so I start to get the speed wobbles. So I don't try and hand hold them much.
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It looks like the
1.4kg version (like the Celestron Skymaster) it is the
the same as I have as they all come from the same Chinese factory Kunming I believe.
I can keep the image steady as long as I sit or lie in a garden chair (particularly when I can lean my shoulders) and while standing only for low objects. Objects high in the sky while standing is for me indeed hard to keep steady.
But the gain over a 10x50 is enormous, 2x the amount of light makes it 0.7 mag brighter. And it provides crisp images and pinpoint stars until at least 2/3 of the FOV and beyond that it is acceptable.
The only con is the rather wobbly eyepiece bridge which finally broke as it is a cast aluminum alloy. I put a piece of 1mm brass sheet between them and an M4 bolt+nut and replaced the center M5 screw and now it is sturdy !
The nicest views for me are:
- Orion Nebula (very nice in a real dark sky)
- Carina Nebula
- M81+M82
- North America Nebula (yes I can see it visually)
- A bigger challenge is IC1396 in Cepheus, but requires a REALLY dark sky, so go to the outback ... I saw it once in my 15x70s + UHC
- Coal Sack area in Crux,
etc. etc.
But all 110 Messiers can be a bit tough, the faintest ones (M108 and 109 in UMa) require a really dark sky.
Not only aperture rules but a dark sky even more !
Buying two 1.25" UHC filters and mounting them into the eyecups can make even a more amazing view of nebulas !