Anybody got any real experience advice on half decent but relatively cheap telescopes, I have no intention of looking for the beginnings of time, just the moon and nearby planets!
Are the likes of the ones available from Aldi ok, or should ones like those be avoided?
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A quick search of Amazon, filter by 5 star reviews and you'll be having a Jodrell Bank in no time.
I used to not give a foc, then I discovered Red Bull and now I don't give a flying foc !!!
Used to love a Jodrell bank =wank but now I have a child so I'm too tired most of the time.
Have a nosy on something like sky and telescope forum as there is always newbies looking for advice, I came across it when I was looking for a pair of binos
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
I've got a friend who's very in to this, I'll ask some questions.
Money doesn't buy happiness, but it buys beer, and that helps!
/\ thanks.
I've briefly perused some of the forums regarding cheap ones but the only info I can get is very much snobbery, it's like like they're comparing a fzs600 to an R1!
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I think you will not go far wrong with a pair of binos as they are used just as much by the enthusiasts for general sky watching have a look here
http://www.bestbinocularsreviews.com/bin...ronomy.php
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
ok, ready for this.......
If on a boat (I told him you live on a canal boat) then a refractor on a tripod would be suitable for space storage & portability. But you get more bang for your buck if u get a reflector, but they tend to be a bit longer than refractors. A 100mm refractor would be good but they come in different focal lengths so a short tube design would be best. But for same money he could get a 150mm reflector which means more light & detail than the 100mm refractor.
oh and I wouldn't buy the Aldi ones, they are very very basic and not that great.
I've got a meade scope but I can't remember the details, I've not used it in ages. You can see jupiter's planets with it but you don't see detail just pin points of light, but pin points you wouldn't see without a scope.
Are you local(ish) to canterbury? This school do public viewing nights every first friday of the month, I've not been for a year or so. It's all free and they have an observatory and loads of local astronomers set up their scopes, you wander round and just chat... loads of advice, get to see some cool things, it's a great place to start.
Money doesn't buy happiness, but it buys beer, and that helps!
24-03-15, 03:51 PM
(This post was last modified: 24-03-15, 03:58 PM by Punkstig.)
Cheers harry, that's the kind of info I was after.
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