Hi Patrick,
My mother had a retinal detachment in middle age and so I get an annual detailed retinal exam using those drops. They are horrible, they sting, and leave the vision blurred and with vision blurred like that, you are not permitted to drive for 2-3 hours afterwards. I've always assumed that the vision is blurred because they are a muscle relaxant and so they not only relax the pupil contraction muscles but also the focussing muscles of the lens. I've never tried but I really doubt you will get a clear view of anything through a scope.
You are much better off accurately measuring your pupil dilation and then matching the exit pupil (ExP) of the telescope to the dilation of your pupil to ensure 100% light transmission to the eye. This is especially important as you age and your pupil dilation starts to reduce.
A couple of examples: -
At age 60, your maximum dilation is typically around 5mm.
With a 5mm pupil dilation, the brightness of deep sky objects viewed through a pair of 10x42(4.2mm ExP) and 9x63(7mm ExP) binoculars is almost identical. The 9x63 binoculars are transmitting equivalent to a pair of 9x45mm binoculars. But if you step up to a pair of 15x70(4.6mm ExP), the image is vastly brighter because the light from the full 70mm is reaching your retina.
If you have a 16 inch f4 telescope and you use a 40mm eyepiece(10mm ExP), only 25% of the light from the telescope is entering your eye and your eye is only receiving as much light as you would get from that same 40mm eyepiece through an 8" f8, or a 20mm eyepiece through an 8" f4, or a 25mm eyepiece through an 8"f5.
I have recently written a detailed article here that talks about pupil dilation, exit pupil and observing strategies for maximising light transmission from the telescope for aging astronomers. Aging in this context is 30 years of age onwards.
You can download a PDF copy here: -
https://theskysearchers.com/viewtopi...281281#p280632
There is an extra chart that I have put together since writing the article that aids with choosing efficient eyepiece combinations with various telescopes at different ages.
https://theskysearchers.com/viewtopi...281281#p281071
cheers
Joe