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Having been involved in Astronomy for over thirty years I can honestly
say that I consider many beginners to this hobby to be wasting money on needless equipement. If you are considering buying a starter type telescope, do consider first a good pair of binoculars. I have both a 10" reflector telescope and a pair of quality binos, and to be honest I consider the binoculars to be much superior for general astronomy. Another advantage is that binoculars can be used for other things such as bird watching etc. I cannot emphasis enough how important it is to get the right equipement at the outset of starting this hobby, and if funds are low binoculars will win through everytime. Hope this helps someone. Bernie |
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Any recommended sizes or models of binoculars ?
"Bernie" wrote in message m... Having been involved in Astronomy for over thirty years I can honestly say that I consider many beginners to this hobby to be wasting money on needless equipement. If you are considering buying a starter type telescope, do consider first a good pair of binoculars. I have both a 10" reflector telescope and a pair of quality binos, and to be honest I consider the binoculars to be much superior for general astronomy. Another advantage is that binoculars can be used for other things such as bird watching etc. I cannot emphasis enough how important it is to get the right equipement at the outset of starting this hobby, and if funds are low binoculars will win through everytime. Hope this helps someone. Bernie |
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![]() "Bernie" wrote in message m... Having been involved in Astronomy for over thirty years I can honestly say that I consider many beginners to this hobby to be wasting money on needless equipement. If you are considering buying a starter type telescope, do consider first a good pair of binoculars. snip I cannot emphasis enough how important it is to get the right equipement at the outset of starting this hobby, and if funds are low binoculars will win through everytime. I agree up to a point. The proviso I have is that unless you have a very steady hand binoculars are not that easy to use and could easily be off putting At least a telescope on a stand of some sort does not have this problem. Norman |
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In message , Bernie
writes Having been involved in Astronomy for over thirty years I can honestly say that I consider many beginners to this hobby to be wasting money on needless equipement. If you are considering buying a starter type telescope, do consider first a good pair of binoculars. I have both a 10" reflector telescope and a pair of quality binos, and to be honest I consider the binoculars to be much superior for general astronomy. Another advantage is that binoculars can be used for other things such as bird watching etc. I cannot emphasis enough how important it is to get the right equipement at the outset of starting this hobby, and if funds are low binoculars will win through everytime. I'm an astronomy newbie and, having bought a second hand Celestron 114 EQ, think I probably did it about face. I may well have been better to get some good binoculars and made an effort to get to know the solar system and principal constellations first. Fortunately (through this newsgroup and the Society for Popular Astronomy) I've made a couple of good contacts. One has already helped me (thanks Martin Hall!), and the other is awaiting a decent clear sky night (thanks in advance Martin Anderson!). Had a great night on Thursday with decent viewing of: - Moon - Jupiter + all four moons - M13 - Ring Nebula - Comet NEAT I appreciate that I'm sending out mixed messages here. But I think the moral is - a telescope is fine but you need someone knowledgeable available to help you. Frankly, up until Martin H. coming to see me, I really had no confidence that the telescope was correctly put together, or indeed that it worked properly! You can only imagine the relief I felt when I was able to use my scope to see images nearly as clear as Martin H's (which were to me, as a newbie, awesome). I'm now can't wait for the next clear sky and, hopefully more assistance! Now, if only I can get an understanding of using RA and declination! ... Cheers, -- Neale Hind Insanity is hereditary, you get it from your children |
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For binos I would go for something like 10x50.
Mark |
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![]() "Mark" wrote in message ... For binos I would go for something like 10x50. Mark When I was a 'nipper' (8 or so) I got the Astro bug and asked my Dad for a telescope for Xmas. He asked an astromoner friend of his what scope was best to get a youngster...the bugger said a pair of 8x40's. I was gutted, I wanted a 'proper' telescope!!!! Looking back though, it was a good decision! At that age, bino's let you learn the sky the easy way, just can pan around the sky until you find something interesting and then look it up in a book and go 'WOW'. I've never looked back....... Gaz --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.691 / Virus Database: 452 - Release Date: 27/05/2004 |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Choosing a first telescope (advice for UK beginners) | Stephen Tonkin | Amateur Astronomy | 8 | December 2nd 03 12:59 AM |
Choosing a first telescope (advice for beginners) | Stephen Tonkin | UK Astronomy | 1 | December 1st 03 08:08 AM |
Buying a starter telescope (advice for beginners) | Stephen Tonkin | Misc | 0 | November 30th 03 07:38 PM |
When a beginner asks advice | Bernie | UK Astronomy | 22 | November 11th 03 12:52 AM |
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