I did. In seriousness, though, I do wonder how many people buy telescopes after seeing Hubble images and whatnot and then get home and point them at the sky and see white dots and the occasional gray smudge of a galaxy or nebula IF they are able to find them (which can be a real pain in the ass, even with an computerized drive like this scope has.)
get a real telescope.
my brother has one and you can see stuff like that for real (although a bit less saturated and ofcourse a lot smaller).
looking at Io is actually possible with that thing :icon14:
MKJ wrote:get a real telescope.
my brother has one and you can see stuff like that for real (although a bit less saturated and ofcourse a lot smaller).
looking at Io is actually possible with that thing :icon14:
ofcourse his wasnt 200 bucks
Yeah the gf's father has a scope like that. The thing is great.
tnf wrote:I did. In seriousness, though, I do wonder how many people buy telescopes after seeing Hubble images and whatnot and then get home and point them at the sky and see white dots and the occasional gray smudge of a galaxy or nebula IF they are able to find them (which can be a real pain in the ass, even with an computerized drive like this scope has.)
And yea, all the pics you see from HST and pretty much anything else with color is the result of different filters, etc. The colors you see do represent different temps and gas compositions or whatnot, but you aren't going to resolve those things with any regular scope unless you are doing some astrophotography stuff yourself.