Detailed information about this product's features CG-4 mount
This Celestron telescope has:
• 102mm f/8.8 ED refractor optics for freedom from spurious color
• StarBright XLT multicoatings for the highest possible light transmission
• CG-4 German equatorial mount with ball bearings and stainless steel tripod
• 6 x 30mm finderscope
• 25mm 1.25" eyepiece (40x)
• 2-year warranty
The Celestron Omni XLT 102 ED refractor combines premium ED (Extra-low Dispersion glass) optics for near apochromatic performance with a solid German equatorial mount – at a remarkably sensible price for a scope of its quality. It provides an excellent mix of performance, portability, stability, and features that any serious backyard astronomer can appreciate.
For the observer whose interests are the brighter solar system and deep space objects, the Omni XLT 102 ED has a lot to offer. It is exceptional for observing within the solar system. Its views of subtle lunar and planetary details are sharp and contrasty, bringing the planets to vivid life in the eyepiece. The ED glass element in its doublet optical system reduces chromatic aberration or spurious color (the halo of unfocussed violet light around the Moon, planets, and bright stars visible in lesser scopes) to exceptionally low levels, even approaching the color-free performance of multiple-thousand dollar ultra-premium apochromatic refractors.
It has a sensibly large aperture and diffraction-free images that make it surprisingly good for much deep space observing, as well. Binary stars and globular star clusters are particularly well-resolved and vivid, with the contrasting colors of many binary systems showing nicely. The brighter nebulas and galaxies stand out against a darker sky background than is possible in a comparably-priced reflector with its light-scattering diagonal mirror.
This Telescope’s Optical System . . . - ED refractor optics: 4" (102mm) aperture, 900mm focal length, f/8.8 doublet lens using an ED (Extra-low Dispersion glass) element and aspheric lens shaping technology for images that have virtually no chromatic or spherical aberration. The lens cell is fully collimatable for optimum sharpness. The length of the 8 pound optical tube is a very manageable 37".
- Starbright XLT multicoated optics: Fully coated on all air-to-glass surfaces with multiple layers of magnesium fluoride and hafnium dioxide antireflection coatings for the highest possible light transmission and contrast. They are the same coatings used on Celestron’s largest and most expensive optical systems.
- Lens cap/aperture stop: A protective lens cap is provided to cover the objective lens of the telescope and keep it dust-free when the scope is not in use.
- Dew shield: Slows the formation of dew on the lens in cold weather to extend your undisturbed observing time. Also improves visual and photographic contrast by shielding the lens from off-axis ambient light (the neighbor’s yard light, moonlight, etc.)
- Rack and pinion focuser: 2" focuser, with 1.25" eyepiece adapter. Dual focusing knobs with rubber gripping surfaces for precise image control with either hand. The large focus knobs are easy to operate, even while wearing gloves or mittens in cold weather. The eyepiece holder has built-in T-threads for attaching an optional T-ring and camera for prime focus photography.
- Star diagonal: 90° viewing angle prism-type 1.25" star diagonal.
- Eyepiece: Fully multicoated low power 1.25" 25mm (36x) eyepiece with a 1.39° field of view (two and three-quarter times the diameter of the full Moon).
- Finderscope: 6 x 30mm straight-through achromatic design, with a wide 7° field of view. To focus, loosen the trim ring behind the objective lens cell, screw the lens cell in or out until the stars are sharp, and tighten the trim ring to lock in the correct focus.
- Software: Comes with TheSky Level 1 sky-charting CD-ROM that has a database of 10,000 stars and objects it can plot and display on your Windows-based computer screen. That’s enough solar system and deep space detail to keep you busy observing for years, yet not so much that you’re overwhelmed by charts showing much more detail than your scope can usefully reveal. Custom sky chart printing lets you print out eyepiece finder charts to use with your telescope to help you locate and identify the planets and many famous and faint deep space nebulas, galaxies, and star clusters by star-hopping from object to object using your scope’s slow motion controls. There are 75 full color images of well-known celestial objects to help you identify them through your scope.
This Telescope’s Mount . . . - CG-4 German equatorial mount: The mount has setting circles in both right ascension and declination, worm gear drives and manual slow motion controls in both axes, a latitude scale and fine adjustment controls in both altitude and azimuth, two counterweights totaling 11 pounds so you can easily balance virtually any accessory load, and more. Ball bearings provide smooth tracking in both axes. An optional dual axis DC drive/drive corrector is available for no-hands tracking of celestial objects and photography. It is not possible to upgrade to a computerized go-to drive system. For more details, click on the “mount" icon above.
- Adjustable height tripod: The tripod has 1.75" diameter steel legs with a center leg brace for rigidity. It adjusts over a height range from 33" to 47". Vibration damping characteristics are excellent. The center leg brace is drilled to form a convenient accessory tray that holds 1.25" and 2" eyepiece to keep them up out of the dew-soaked grass.
- Dovetail tube mount: The scope’s optical tube rings are connected to a mounting plate that slips into a dovetail groove on the mount’s equatorial head. Setup and takedown times are exceptionally fast, as a single large hand-tighten knob holds the optical tube in place. A second lock knob prevents the tube from sliding off the mount should the hand-tighten knob accidentally loosen while observing.
- Two-year warranty: All Celestron telescopes have a two-year warranty, double that of competitive scopes.
What can you see through this 102mm Celestron refractor? With a relatively short 900mm focal length and a light grasp 212 times that of the sharpest dark-adapted eye, the scope is capable of producing surprisingly bright wide-field images of the faint fuzzies outside the solar system – nebulas, galaxies, open star clusters, and more.
But those objects requiring high power and high contrast – globular clusters, close binary star pairs, lunar and planetary images, etc. – are where this ED scope shines. Using optional eyepieces and/or a Barlow to boost the magnification, you can see subtle solar system details that are virtually invisible in smaller aperture scopes. You can study lunar craters, rilles, mountain ranges, and low contrast lunar ray detail. With reasonable seeing conditions, detail in Jupiter’s cloud belts and the Great Red Spot (actually closer in color to the Faint Pink Spot at this point in time) are visible, as are dusky markings on the face of Saturn and Cassini’s division in Saturn’s brilliant rings.
Best of all, planetary and stellar colors will be true to life, thanks to the spurious color-banishing performance of the scope’s ED doublet optics.
Optically and mechanically refined, and very reasonable in cost for a 4" true ED refractor, this Celestron Omni XLT 102 ED has enough optical performance to keep you busy for the rest of your life.
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