New to astronomy, what scope to buy?
New to astronomy, what scope to buy?
[WTB] hi, im new to astronomy and im thinking of purchasing a cheap telescope/binoculars, mainly use for stargazing. i have limited knowledge about the products and functions. any recommendations?
- shirox
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hi Jialin, welcome to Singastro lol
I believe you are very eager to purchase your first telescope and start exploring the wonders of the universe.
Before you embark on that journey, i would suggest reading up abit on the objects that you can and can not see in the skies.
Also some books like Backyard astronomy offers very detail information not only about cosmos but also towards what type of telescopes, mounts, eyepiece, filters, cameras etc etc.
Regards,
Shirox
I believe you are very eager to purchase your first telescope and start exploring the wonders of the universe.
Before you embark on that journey, i would suggest reading up abit on the objects that you can and can not see in the skies.
Also some books like Backyard astronomy offers very detail information not only about cosmos but also towards what type of telescopes, mounts, eyepiece, filters, cameras etc etc.
Regards,
Shirox
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- cloud_cover
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Welcome to the forum
Actually, why not "borrow" equipment? Do join some of the stargazing sessions that the folks announce around here and you'll be able to see what kind of equipment does what
Also important: what's your budget and are you willing to take used items? Buying second hand really cuts down the costs.
Actually, why not "borrow" equipment? Do join some of the stargazing sessions that the folks announce around here and you'll be able to see what kind of equipment does what
Also important: what's your budget and are you willing to take used items? Buying second hand really cuts down the costs.
DON'T PANIC
Hi Jialin. Welcome to Singastro. My recommendation is to make your limited knowledge less limited by reading up on the subject.
- Read the Singastro wiki pages:
http://www.singastro.org/web/mediawiki/ ... /Main_Page
- Borrow and read telescope/binoculars and stargazing books and magazines from the library (section 520).
- Understand the pros and cons of the 3 major types of telescope design. Then decide which design best suit your observing preferences and budget.
- You may find my article useful:
http://www.astro.sg/p/buying-telescope.html
Good Luck!
- Read the Singastro wiki pages:
http://www.singastro.org/web/mediawiki/ ... /Main_Page
- Borrow and read telescope/binoculars and stargazing books and magazines from the library (section 520).
- Understand the pros and cons of the 3 major types of telescope design. Then decide which design best suit your observing preferences and budget.
- You may find my article useful:
http://www.astro.sg/p/buying-telescope.html
Good Luck!
http://www.astro.sg
email: gary[at]astro.sg
twitter: @astrosg
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
email: gary[at]astro.sg
twitter: @astrosg
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
Welcome Jialin343.
I definitely agree with what the others have mentioned above
Like you, when I first joined, I was so eager to get my hands on some glass!
Initially I wanted a 10x50 binos or a 15x70 (despite everyone telling me it was going to be heavy with limited field of view.....)
Then I started to look at telescopes... the Bosma Beta and the Celestron StarBlast...
The good thing was.... I resisted all of it! Now I'm just enjoying the journey of astrophotography with my camera, and slowly learning the nightsky 1 cluster and 1 star at a time
Best part? I saved a lot of money along the way!
I definitely agree with what the others have mentioned above
Like you, when I first joined, I was so eager to get my hands on some glass!
Initially I wanted a 10x50 binos or a 15x70 (despite everyone telling me it was going to be heavy with limited field of view.....)
Then I started to look at telescopes... the Bosma Beta and the Celestron StarBlast...
The good thing was.... I resisted all of it! Now I'm just enjoying the journey of astrophotography with my camera, and slowly learning the nightsky 1 cluster and 1 star at a time
Best part? I saved a lot of money along the way!
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- Enterprise
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- Joined: Sat May 26, 2007 3:05 am
- Location: Singapore, Marine Parade (ECP)
If ur adamant about getting a scope to try i recommend james ling's 6se nexstar, its quite idiot proof, good price and easily to set up and lug around.
But please do go for a few outings before committing yourself to an expensive purchase, a telescope is not like tennis where the racket is low cost and u cant do without it. U can do basic astronomy without any telescope at all.
But please do go for a few outings before committing yourself to an expensive purchase, a telescope is not like tennis where the racket is low cost and u cant do without it. U can do basic astronomy without any telescope at all.
-
- Posts: 142
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 6:11 pm
- Location: Jurong West
- Contact:
Yes, the 6SE is really a portable scope to move around....Enterprise wrote:If ur adamant about getting a scope to try i recommend james ling's 6se nexstar, its quite idiot proof, good price and easily to set up and lug around.
But please do go for a few outings before committing yourself to an expensive purchase, a telescope is not like tennis where the racket is low cost and u cant do without it. U can do basic astronomy without any telescope at all.
Its XLT optics and accurate goto functions make it a very useful scope to go for .
You can locate Uranus and Neptune easily with this scope, which I have tried during the testing during one of the recent woodlands multi storey carpark.
REgards
James ling