Omegon 90mm Maksutov - Compact spotting scope for nature, astronomy and travelNature-watching with a telescope or spotting scope is a most satisfying experience. The Mak-90 shows you a wealth of detail. It does not matter whether you are enthralled watching a bird 50 meters away, or amazed observing the Moon 380,000 km away - the Skywatcher mak is excellent for both nature-watching and astronomy. Observe nature to beyond the limits of the horizon. The advantages in a nutshell: compact mirror telescope with a short overall length all-in-one: shipped direct in a rucksack - ready to use multi-coating for high contrast the 90mm aperture makes it also useful at twilight accepts a wide range of 1.25" accessories- independent of manufacturer find instead of searching - with its 8x21 finder scope fits on any photo tripod a GP rail makes it easy to attach to an astronomical mountTake a bead on the moon and planets There is a lot to discover up there in the night sky. The telescope reveals details to you that you cannot see with the naked eye. For example, the planets - observe the rings of Saturn, the Galilean moons of the gas giant Jupiter, or the phases of the hot planet Venus. Or take a walk on the Moon and discover its thousands of craters. Small and compact - ideal for outdoor use The Skywatcher Mak 90 is particularly compact and so is ideal for nature-watching. It is quickly assembled for any kind of observing. Since the OTA fits in a small backpack, it is always ready for any adventure. Whether on a hike, traveling on vacation or even on a planned excursion - just grab the backpack and you have everything you will need. Flip-mirror for photography and relaxed observing Observing and photographing together, is that possible? This is quite simple with the 90mm Maksutov because while observing with an eyepiece, you can
B**S
Bad QC and language barrier
After using this telescope a few times I began to notice image aberrations on the extreme in and out focus ranges. When viewing through the telescope I could tell something was in the way of the image train. It was already outside of the return window so I emailed Omegon my concerns. Their reply in unclear (probably auto translated) english said "Pinched optics. Unscrew the front a little" Well, after trying that, I unscrewed the front lens cell all the way and discovered the problem. On the back of the front meniscus cell the secondary mirror on the inside has a glare shield/shroud that was glued off-center. The misalignment takes up a large portion of the light path and greatly reduces the aperture. It seems like no person or machine checked this at the factory before final assembly and shipment.
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