Meade 70AZ-AR instruction manual Taking Care of Your Telescope, Optional Accessories

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Let’s say that you have obtained a 13mm eyepiece. You can tell that what the focal length of your eyepiece is as it is always printed on the side of an eyepiece. Divide: 700 ÷ 13, which equals 53.8. Round this off to the nearest whole number and your new eyepiece magnifies objects 54 times.

A great optional accessory is a Barlow lens If you use a Barlow lens with one of your eyepieces, it doubles the magnification

of your eyepiece. Other types of Barlows can triple or further increase the power of an eyepiece. To find out how much the magnification is when you use a Barlow, multiply your eyepiece’s magnification by two.

Eyepiece’s magnification x 2

=

Magnification with a 2X Barlow lens

Your 25mm low-power eyepiece magnifies an object 28 times. Multiply 28 by 2 and you get 56 times magnification with a Barlow.

It’s worth repeating: Keep in mind that a bright, clear, but smaller image is more

interesting than a larger, dimmer, fuzzy one. Using too high a power eyepiece is one of the most common mistakes made by new astronomers. So don’t think that higher magnification is necessarily better—quite often the best view is with lower magnification value!

TAKING CARE OF YOUR TELESCOPE

Your telescope is a precision optical instrument designed for a lifetime of rewarding viewing. It will rarely, if ever, require factory servicing or maintenance. Follow these guidelines to keep your telescope in the best condition:

Avoid cleaning the telescope’s lenses. A little dust on the front surface of the telescope’s correcting lens will not cause loss of image quality.

When absolutely necessary, dust on the front lens should be removed with very gentle strokes of a camel hair brush or blown off with an ear syringe (available at most pharmacies).

Fingerprints and organic materials on the front lens may be removed with a solution

of 3 parts distilled water to 1 part isopropyl alcohol. You may also add 13 1 drop of biodegradable dishwashing soap per pint of solution. Use soft, white facial tissues and make short, gentle strokes. Change tissues often.

CAUTION: Do not use scented or lotioned tissues or damage could result to the optics. DO NOT use a commercial photographic lens cleaner.

OPTIONAL ACCESSORIES

#928 45° Erecting Prism (1.25 O.D.): Correctly orients the telescopic image

JOIN AN ASTRONOMY CLUB, ATTEND A STAR PARTY

One of the best ways to increase your knowledge of astronomy is to join an astronomy club. Check your local newspaper, school, library, or telescope dealer/ store to find out if there’s a club in your area.

Many groups also hold regularly scheduled Star Parties at which you can check out and observe with many different telescopes and other pieces of astronomical equipment. Magazines such as Sky and Telescope and Astronomy print schedules for many popular Star Parties around the United States and Canada.

Looking at or near the Sun will cause irreversible damage to your eye. Do not point this telescope at or near the Sun. Do not look through the telescope as it is moving.

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Contents 70AZ-AR Tel70AZAR5 3/28/07 1009 AM Introduction Inset a Attach the Accessory Tray Assemble Your TripodAttach the Optical Tube to the Mount Attach the RED DOT Viewfinder Attach the Diagonal Mirror and EyepieceAlign the RED DOT Viewfinder Meade 4M Community To Move the TelescopeSUN Warning Most Important RuleObserving TOO Much POWER?Tel70AZAR5 3/28/07 1009 AM Tel70AZAR5 3/28/07 1009 AM Surf the WEB Some Observing TipsStar Charts Optional AccessoryAstronomy Resources What do the specifications mean? Have a Good TIME, Astronomy is FUN SpecificationsOptional Accessories Taking Care of Your TelescopeJoin AN Astronomy CLUB, Attend a Star Party Tel70AZAR5 3/28/07 1009 AM Meade Limited Warranty Meade Consumer SolutionsDrawing of Image Tel70AZAR5 3/28/07 1009 AM 800