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Celestron 127EQ PowerSeeker Telescope

Celestron 127EQ PowerSeeker Telescope

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Brand: Celestron
Category: Photography

List Price: $192.95
Buy New: $129.95
You Save: $63.00 (33%)



New (17) from $129.95

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 2026

Media: Electronics
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Optical Zoom: 5
Shipping Weight (lbs): 29.7
Dimensions (in): 30.9 x 16.9 x 8.5
Warranty: 2 years warranty

MPN: 21049
Model: 21049
UPC: 050234210492
EAN: 0050234210492
ASIN: B0007UQNKY

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
   3x Barlow Lens
   German Equatorial Mount
   127mm Aperture
   1000mm Focal Length
   Comes with aluminum tripod and accessory tray

Accessories:

   Celestron 93626 Universal Digital Camera Adapter
   Built NY Two-Bottle Tote, Black
   Celestron 94304 Nine-Piece Accessory Kit

Similar Items:

   Celestron Sky Maps
   Turn Left at Orion: A Hundred Night Sky Objects to See in a Small Telescope--and How to Find Them
   NightWatch: A Practical Guide to Viewing the Universe
   Astronomy For Dummies (For Dummies (Math & Science))
   Celestron 93626 Universal Digital Camera Adapter

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The Celestron PowerSeeker 127 is a 5" equatorial reflector with a big enough aperture to show clear views of the brighter star clusters, nebulas, and galaxies. Its Newtonian reflector optics give you detailed and sharp views of the Moon and planets without the faint purple haze of chromatic aberration (spurious color) that surrounds every bright object in every refractor scope in this price range. The construction of the optical system has all-glass optical components with high reflectivity aluminum mirror coatings for enhanced image brightness and clarity. The equatorial mount has slow motion controls in both axes, to let you easily track objects across the sky. The Celestron PowerSeeker 127 has a light grasp 329 times that of the sharpest eye. The 1.25" focuser has dual focusing knobs 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 4mm eyepiece is right at the scope's usable magnification limit on the rare nights of very good seeing conditions. An optional 6mm or 7mm eyepiece comes closer to providing the highest useful power on a night in/night out basis. By aligning the mount on the north celestial pole, you only need to turn one slow motion control knob to follow planets and stars as they travel across the sky. A counterweight on the opposite side of the mount from the telescope balances the weight of the optical tube and makes it easy to move the scope effortlessly from one part of the sky to another. There are two slow motion control knobs connected to the mount by long flexible cables so they are easy to reach while observing. 0.91 arc seconds Resolution 5 Aperture


Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars 1st night a total bust   December 28, 2008
Paul S. Wilson (Highland Village, Texas USA)
Ok. I don't know how you guys are doing it.
I assembled the telescope ok with the supplied directions. I attempted to align the sighting scope with the mirror. It was way off and very difficult to adjust. It is so unhelpful that the spotting scope shows a world upside down and backwards. It constantly makes you move the telescope the wrong way to find what you are looking for.
I also had difficulty with the up-down (latitude) adjustment. Why are there two locks for that? If one is locked up you can't move the other one. Not user friendly for fine tuning. Not intuitive to me.
I had no success finding a single object in the main viewer. I wasn't trying to use the magnifying eyepiece.
If the spotting scope is no good and the eyepieces are no good, why have this thing?
OK, I am frustrated at the moment and will try again tomorrow. Other people have had better results so I will assume I just need more practice. I will change and delete this post if I figure it out.
BTW, I have no telescope experience but have read scores of books on astronomy and I know, sort of, where good stuff is and what it is. I found the Andromeda galaxy easily in binoculars, but couldn't even get the scope on the Orion nebula, seeing all the stars around it with the naked eye easily.

Later: Well, I have managed to find the moon and the Orion nebula. The spotting scope keeps getting bumped out of position so it is necessary to aim the whole telescope. With total manual controls, it is most difficult to find an object even if you are very close to it. But practice is helping. I don't have especially dark skies, so the potential of my viewing is unknown. The moon looked pretty good. With the Orion nebula, I could resolve only 2 of the 4 central Trapezium stars, but some nebulosity was visable. It looks nothing like long exposures from a big mirror under dark skies, but better than my big binoculars and much harder to find.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent Product   October 17, 2008
Benno Bok (Singapore)
I got this telescope to replace my old 60mm refractor which had fungal growth at the objective lens. Unlike the other customers, I bought this telescope at a local store with a 2-year warranty. Thus, the telescope was unbroken and packaged properly. The instruction manual was detailed and the telescope came with a software known as theSky, which is a useful program that allows you to locate celestial bodies at the place and time which you are at.

The telescope itself is a sturdy unit, and was properly collimated. With its 127mm aperture, I could easily view planets, stars, and also the moon with great ease. The telescope mount is german equatorial, which was useful as it allows you to track down the star you want to find in the night sky by countering the earth's rotation. As this type of mounting also causes the telescope to move in a slow motion, it is easier to pinpoint a star as compared to an alt-azimuth mount.



4 out of 5 stars Not a bad telescope   July 22, 2008
Ben Libben (Irvine, California)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is my first telescope i bought. It was easy to assemble, only took about 10-15 min. The power is good for a beginner. You can see jupiter's moons and the shadow on venus. If you buy this telescope i suggest getting a new barlow lense because the one that comes with it is terrible. Also get a new finder scope. It may look cool but its a piece of junk.

The bottom line is that it is an overall good telescope



3 out of 5 stars Very good if the piece is good   June 3, 2008
Nikul Suthar
The first piece was poor in visibility and has to get replaced with a another one. The other one was having very good visibility since beginning. Difficult to collimate if one does not have proper experience and/or tools. But very good for the price offered and for the people who know how to use the Equatorial mount. The new piece contained an erect view 20 mm eyepiece but is not as comfortable as the the old piece had 20 mm eyepiece with inverted view. The erect eyepiece I did not find good for astro-photography as well. So I retained the old eyepiece and returned the new eyepiece with the old telescope.

I would have given 5 stars if the first piece were working good and would have given 1 star if both would not have worked good. I'm giving 3 stars as the first one has to return and second is working good.



2 out of 5 stars Good - not great -   May 5, 2008
Gordon C. Cain (Orlando, FL)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a good scope - not great. Would not recommend. The focuser was sloppy, too much play. Disassembled it, added more teflon shims, relubed it with silicon and tightened the gear. The tripod, despite it's rugged looks in flimsy. If you have even a moderate breeze expect your image to be shaky and blurry.

The finder scope is cheap, awkward and poorly mounted.

As an aside - I bought a 70MM Mead refractor ($50). Is easier to use, less bulky and gets just as good an image.

Lesson learned: A large diameter refractor is great if you are not in an urban lighted area. It is good for deep sky, if you do not have light pollution.


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