TMB Planetary series

· Home  · View Cart  · Wish List  · Order History  · Account Information  
Telescopes, Meade Telescopes, CCD Cameras, Celestron Telescopes
Home How to pick a telescope | Telescopes | Accessories | New Products | Used & Demo / Special Sales | Binoculars & Spotting Scopes | 
Accessory Kits | Books, Software, & Star Charts | CCD | Eyepieces & Barlows | Filters | Mounts | Photographic | Visual and Everything Else | Gift Certificate
· $10 - $50
· $50 - $100
· $100 - $500
· $500 - $1000
· $1000 - $2500
· Advanced Search
· Telescope Search
· Top 15 Keyword Searches
· Browse Manufacturers
· Edit Search Preferences



  Sign-in
  New user
  Join our mailing list


We accept Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, and PayPal
If You Find a Lower Price....

christophers, ltd. christophers, ltd.

First Telescope First Telescope

Meade Dealer Meade Dealer
Celestron Dealer Celestron Dealer

 Instruction Manuals
 Current Print Ads
 Instructional Videos
 Astronomical Terms
 Warranty Information

Orders:800-422-7876
Questions:405-364-0858
24-Hour Fax:405-447-3337







Accessories / Eyepieces & Barlows / TMB EyepiecesTMB Planetary series
Printer friendly version
Email page link to a friend
TMB Planetary series
Individual eyepiece descriptions follow this somewhat lengthy introductory material.

Many of today’s premium eyepieces have very wide fields of view to give an exciting “picture window” view of deep space. However, these eyepieces need many exotically-shaped glass elements to achieve a wide field of view – up to 9 lenses in some cases. More lenses mean more cost and more glass (which cuts the amount of light transmitted). More lenses mean more air-to-glass surfaces to scatter light (which gives lower contrast and sometimes multiple ghost images of bright objects). In addition, with all these extra lenses, optical design compromises have to be made that sometimes result in lateral color and light scatter.

Lateral color is an aberration where different colors intercept the focal plane at different points and can sometimes be seen as a haze of false color around bright objects, both on- and off-axis. Light scatter is seen as a distracting halo or glow around bright objects, which can also reduce contrast with the object itself. Light scatter and lateral color are rarely seen in these wide field eyepieces when observing faint deep sky objects, but they are the bane of lunar, planetary, and double star observers. These observers don’t need an extra-wide field of view to see small details and subtle contrast differences on the Moon and planets. While a comfortably wide view that can show all of a planet’s moons in a single field is a bonus, more important is an eyepiece with high contrast, no scattered light, and the highest possible definition.

Until now, orthoscopic and Plössl eyepiece have been the eyepieces of choice for these observers. Their low number of lenses (four) and air-to-glass surfaces (also four) give visibly better contrast and definition than the more exotic extra wide field eyepieces. A high quality orthoscopic or Plössl eyepiece on a good telescope gives views of Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn that are unforgettable. But even the ortho and Plössl designs can be improved for lunar and planetary use.

The TMB Planetary eyepieces are the first long eye relief eyepieces with a comfortably wide field that have the sharpness, contrast, and lack of lateral color and light scatter for planetary observing of the best orthoscopic and Plössl designs. What they don’t have is the ortho and Plössl’s limited eye relief and restricted fields. They provide a 60° field of view with high contrast, a tack sharp view, and surprisingly long eye relief for relatively unvignetted eyeglass use.

The TMB Planetary eyepieces are fully internally baffled and all internal spacers have antireflection microbaffles on their edges and full flat black anodizing to reduce reflections. The field stop likewise has microbaffles in its edge to reduce off-axis flaring. Every air to glass surface is broadband multicoated for peak light transmission and superb contrast on subtle lunar and planetary detail. Each has a flexible rubber fold-down eyeguard on top of a twist-up eyecup that can be raised or lowered over a 20mm range to match precisely the eye relief you find most comfortable. The eye lens is very large, which many people find more user-friendly than the narrow diameter lens of most short focal length eyepieces. Spherical aberration of the exit pupil is well controlled, so there are no serious blackouts or kidney-bean effects if you move your eye slightly off the eyepiece sweet spot, as you find with many other wide field eyepiece types. Dust covers are provided for both ends of each eyepiece. A safety groove is machined into the chrome barrel to engage your focuser thumbscrew to prevent the eyepiece from falling should the thumbscrew accidentally loosen while observing.

Tested against such stellar planetary eyepieces as the legendary TMB Super Monocentrics and the Zeiss Abbe orthos, the TMB Planetary designs were equal in sharpness to these 5-6 times more expensive eyepieces, with wider fields and longer eye relief, and virtually their equal in the amount of light scatter – truly amazing, considering the low price of the TMB Planetary eyepieces.




Home | How to pick a telescope | Telescopes | Accessories | New Products | Used & Demo / Special Sales | Binoculars & Spotting Scopes | 

We accept Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, and PayPal


Link Support



Terms of Sale | PRIVACY POLICY 7/1/2004 | Fine Print

Toll-Free Telephone Astronomics: 800-422-7876; Christophers, Ltd.: 800-356-6603
Alternate Telephone: 405-364-0858 24 Hour Fax Line: 405-447-3337

Telephone Hours: Monday-Friday 8 AM - 9 PM CST
Saturday Noon - 5 PM CST

Store Hours: Monday-Friday 9 AM - 5 PM CST
Saturday Noon - 5 PM CST

Astronomics / Christophers, Ltd.
680 S.W. 24th Ave.
Norman, OK, 73069


© 2008 by Ad-Libs Advertising, Inc. All rights reserved