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Sky-Watcher 200N EQ5 PRO Newtonian Reflecting Telescope with Go-To SynScan Mount & Skywatcher Starpower 17 amp-hr 12V DC battery - Sky-Watcher S11640 | 
| Manufacturer: Sky-Watcher Category: Photography
List Price: $1,295.00 Buy New: $995.00 You Save: $300.00 (23%)
Media: Electronics
MPN: S11640 Model: S11640 ASIN: B001HCP0EG
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | EQ5P 200 N Newtonian reflectors offer modestly large apertures that provide tremendous light gathering capability and reasonable portability |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description See how to receive your rebate payment SW200N-EQ5P/SYN with Free Skywatcher Starpower 17 amp-hr 12V DC battery 713-50000 Sir Isaac Newton is surely smiling down on us from above reveling in how enthusiastically the world has embraced his invention, the reflecting telescope. Whether professional or amateur, the stalwart reflector is the overwhelming instrument of choice when working in the visible spectrum. The classic Newtonian reflector is the most popular large aperture optical design purchased by amateur astronomers. A large mirror is easier to fabricate, and therefore less costly to produce than a lens of equal diameter size. These full size light-buckets are the monster SUVs of amateur astronomy. Go to any major star party and you will see at least one monster Newtonian with a 15-foot ladder leading to an eyepiece dwarfed by the circumference of the telescope's optical tube. Sky-Watcher EQ5 PRO Newtonian reflectors offer modestly large apertures that provide tremendous light gathering capability and reasonable portability. They deliver excellent imaging quality suitable for viewing the solar-system or deep-space. Their large apertures are superbly capable of capturing faint deep-space phenomenon like galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters which require considerable resolution to discern fine detail. GO TO operation makes it easy to automatically locate and track over 30,000 sky objects. Viewing with Sky-Watcher 200N EQ5 PRO: With the acquisition of this superb telescope, an observer joins the ranks of serious amateur astronomers. Scan the Moon's surface along the lunar terminator during the Moon's first quarter phase and be prepared for a spacewalk-like experience. Rich, razor-sharp surface detail is so abundant that the Moon alone offers the potential for many years of rewarding study. Planets will reveal a treasure-trove of interesting surface phenomenon. The resolution discerned in Saturn's rings and Jupiter's cloud belts is presented just l
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