Using your telescope – Orion SKYVIEW PRO 120 EQ User Manual
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The telescope is now balanced on both axes. When you loos-
en the lock lever on one or both axes and manually point the
telescope, it should move without resistance and should not
drift from where you point it.
5. using Your telescope
Focusing the telescope
With the 25mm eyepiece inserted in the diagonal, move the
telescope so the front (open) end is pointing in the general
direction of an object at least 1/4-mile away. Now, with your
fingers, slowly rotate one of the focusing knobs until the object
comes into sharp focus. Go a little bit beyond sharp focus until
the image just starts to blur again, then reverse the rotation of
the knob, just to make sure you’ve hit the exact focus point.
NOTE: The image in the telescope will appear reversed
left-to-right. This is normal for astronomical telescopes
that utilize a star diagonal. The finder scope view will be
rotated 180° (see Figure 5).
If you have trouble focusing, rotate the focusing knob so the
drawtube is in as far as it will go. Now look through the eye-
piece while slowly rotating the focusing knob in the opposite
direction. You should soon see the point at which focus is
reached.
The metal thumbscrew on the top of the body of the focuser
will lock the focuser drawtube in place once the telescope is
properly focused. Before focusing, remember to first loosen
this thumbscrew.
Viewing with Eyeglasses
If you wear eyeglasses, you may able to keep them on while
you observe, if the eyepiece has enough “eye relief” to allow
you to see the whole field of view. You can try this by look-
ing through the eyepiece first with your glasses on, and then
with them off, and see if the glasses restrict the view to only a
portion of the full field. If they do, you can easily observe with
your glasses off by just re-focusing the telescope the needed
amount. If you suffer from severe astigmatism, however, you
may find images noticeably sharper with your glasses on.
aligning the Finder scope
The SkyView Pro 120 EQ comes with a 8x40 achromatic find-
er scope (Figure 3a). The number 8 means eight-times magni-
fication and the 40 indicates a 40mm diameter front lens. The
finder scope makes it easier to locate the subject you want
to observe in the telescope, because the finder scope has a
much wider field-of-view.
The finder scope uses a spring-loaded bracket that makes
alignment of the finderscope very easy. As you turn either of
the thumbscrews, the spring in the bracket’s tensioner moves
in and out to keep the finder scope secure in the bracket.
The finder scope must be aligned accurately with the tele-
scope for proper use. To align it, first aim the main telescope
at an object at least a 1/4 mile away—the top of a telephone
pole, a chimney, etc. First, loosen the R.A. and Dec. lock
levers and move the telescope until it is pointing towards the
desired object; sight along the tube to aim the telescope. Turn
the focus knob until the object is properly focused. Make sure
to position the object in the center of the telescope’s eyepiece
by turning the R.A. and Dec. slow-motion control knobs. (The
R.A. and Dec. lock levers must be tightened to use the slow-
motion control knobs).
Now look in the finder scope. Is the object visible? Ideally it will
be somewhere in the field of view. If not, some coarse adjust-
ment to the finder scope bracket’s alignment thumbscrews will
be needed until the object comes into the finder scope’s field
of view.
With the image in the finder scope’s field of view, you now
need to fine-adjust the alignment thumbscrews to center the
object on the intersection of the crosshairs. Adjust the aim of
the finder scope by turning the thumbscrews, one at a time,
until the object is centered. Make sure the object is still cen-
tered in the telescope’s eyepiece. If it not still centered in the
eyepiece you must recenter it and repeat the alignment pro-
cess.
The finder scope alignment needs to be checked before every
observing session. This can easily be done at night, before
viewing through the telescope. Choose any bright star or plan-
et, center the object in telescope eyepiece, and then adjust
the finder scope bracket’s alignment thumbscrews until the
star or planet is centered on the finder’s crosshairs.
Focusing the finder scope
If, when you look through the finder scope, the images appear
somewhat out of focus, you will need to refocus the finder
scope for your eyes. Loosen the lock ring located behind the
objective lens cell on the body of the finder scope (see Figure
3a). Back the lock ring off by a few turns, for now. Refocus the
finder scope on a distant object by threading the objective lens
cell in or out of the finderscope body. Precise focusing will be
Figure 5.
Images through the finder scope will appear upside-
down and backwards (rotated 180°). Images through the SkyView
Pro 120 EQ with its diagonal in place will be reversed from left-to
right.
View through the SkyView Pro 120 EQ
View through finder scope