Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Telrad Finder Sight Comment: Very , very nice .
This should be your first accessory for your new scope .
Take the finder scope that came with your scope and chunk in the woods .
If you can see your target look through the bullseye in the Telrad and it is in your eyepiece .It's that easy .
Customer Rating:      Summary: Helps find stars and other objets in a hurry Comment: The Telrad finder helps me find objects in the sky in a big hurry. Instead of looking at an upside image of a small part of the sky with the finder scope, the Telrad gives you a bigger picture of the sky that you can quickly train your scope on with the red circles displayed on the glass screen. I mount the Telrad on my 4.5" Reflector with an equitorial mount. Normally it is a pain to find stuff in the sky looking thru the spotting scope and having to deal with the strange axis created by the equitorial mount. With the Telrad, it is kind of like training in on objects with an Etch-a-sketch.
I also made some circles on transparency sheets to use with my sky charts making the device even more valuable for finding fainter objects in the sky.
Overall, I am very satisfied with the product and it has tremendously increase my productivity while star gazing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Telrad: a great "finder scope" Comment: As many new astronomers have discovered, finding an object to look at can be the most difficult part in the hobby. Due to the small field of view most telescopes provide, a wider field of view "finder scope" (essentially a small telescope) is used in conjunction with the main viewing telescope in order to find the desired object(s) more quickly and easily. However, this may not provide enough assistance for the beginner and they become frustrated and lose interest.
This is where the Telrad, and other so called "Red Dot Finders", come in. It is not a telescope. It only projects a red dot, or in the case of the Telrad, a series of concentric red circles, into the sky, letting you know where your telescope is pointed without restricting your field of view at all. This provides you with a much better idea of where you ARE looking and helps your get your telescope pointed where you WANT to look. Just move your telescope with Telrad mounted to it until the red circles are projected over the part of the sky, or object, you wish to view and then look through the telescope eyepiece. More times than not, you will find the desired object within your telescope's field of view on your first try. It gets you "into the ballpark".
The Telrad can be adjusted left/right and up/down so it is aligned with the telescope it is mounted upon. This is critical and a good feature.
It runs on a 9v battery which seems to last quite a long time (battery not included). There is a switch which allows the user to dim or brighten the red circles, making them easier to see.
My favorite design feature of the Telrad is that it can be removed from the base (which attaches to your scope with double stick tape) so you can use the same finder on multiple scopes without having to buy a whole new finder. You just buy an extra Telrad Spare Mounting Base for each scope (trust me, once you get into this hobby, you'll end up with more than one!) and move the finder from scope to scope. Some folks don't like messing up their scope with the double stick tape. It depends on what is more important to you; easy to use telescope or pristine telescope finish.
Another good design feature is, unlike many of the other red dot finders, such as the Orion EZ Finder Deluxe Reflex Sight (my second favorite), the Telrad can be mounted to nearly any telescope.
The only drawback I can think of is that the Telrad is on the large side compared to other red dot finders. However, when compared to most finder scopes, it is on the small side.
Customer Rating:      Summary: GREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEAT Comment: I have read and heard about Telerad Red Dot finders for years but never thought them worth the bother or the expense.
Shows how little I know.
I have two Meade GOTO scopes and one Celestron and have been using the supplied finderscopes with no real complaint but in my old age I guess have found it more difficult to get and keep the finder scope and the telescope in harmony and as a result have had some frustration.
Do I decided to try this unit out and ordered one for my Meade 7" Mak.
It works PERFECTLY"
It is easy to adjust as you go along and as a result, my initial alignment was done and over in three minutes and everything was spot on and dead center in the scope, making for a most enjoyable viewing session despite a moon that was so bright you could have played a night baseball game beneath it.
My other scopes will soon be equipped with an identical finder
Gary Hutchinson
Customer Rating:      Summary: Still a straight through finder Comment: I was looking for a right angle finder, and looking at it you would think it was a right angle finder, but it isn't. It's also very long, which was surprising. Since it wasn't what I was looking for I haven't used it.
If you can get by with a straight through finder that's very long, then it looks like it would work pretty well.
|
|