Orion starblast is a blast!

This review is from: Orion StarBlast 4.5 Astro Reflector Telescope

I have been interested in astronomy for over 50 years and am familiar with quite a few amateur level scopes. Never had a chance to view with the “big boys” but I do know the difference between a toy and an instrument and this scope is not a toy.. I in fact bought this scope as a gift for a quite remarkable 5 year old thinking that it might spark some interest. Prior to giving it to her, I took it for a test run. Within 10 minutes of taking it out of the box it was ready to go. The tabletop model is extremely to move around and setup is a breeze. It uses a battery powered red dot finder rather than a finder scope but this was basically a blessing.

The alignment is proper on. If the red dot is on target, the object is visible. The night I introduced the youngster to the scope afforded just a few targets. No moon out or major planets were visible. She was fascinated far more by the red dot finder than the targets visible. A few nights later, although, her parents took her out and showed her the moon. Now she can’t seem to get enough.

If I’ve any gripes at all, I would have liked to see eye pieces with a small a lot more relief as both the little girl and I wear glasses. Also a moon filter would have been a nice addition. All in all although, I was so impressed, I am going to have myself the 6″ model. I’m not into photography, just looking and this scope does a fine job.

If you’re the occasional stargazer on a budget, you couldn’t do much much better. And hopefully, I’ve sparked an interest in another that will afford her the same pleasure that astronomy has given me almost all my life.

BUY Orion StarBlast 4.5 Equatorial Reflector Telescope HERE

Acceptable Performance…for the price

This review is from: Orion StarBlast 4.5 Equatorial Reflector Telescope

The equatorial mount setup is really a quite lengthy process. It comes in numerous pieces so, if you are buying this get ready to spend most of the very first night putting them all together and figuring out how (the instructions manual just isn’t quite user friendly…you’ll find two primary pictures you might be supposed to use as guide but not too helpful).
The upside of this is that, once armed and leveled, it is pretty strong and firm so you do not have to be adjusting screws and notches all the time like with my previous telescope. This also helps to hold the target image nevertheless.

Packaging was AWFUL. My telescope arrived broken: the primary mirror had separated from the bottom on the tube and hit the secondary mirror numerous times (during transit most likely). The major reflector mirror ended up severely scratched plus the secondary mirror broken. I put it all back together as ideal I could, collimated (adjusted the mirrors angles and tilt) as described within the user’s guide and tested the telescope on Jupiter and its Galilean moons.

The effect in the broken/scratched mirrors is obvious along with the image just isn’t clear. You do not get to see Jupiter’s gas stripes as advertised. You are able to nevertheless get a very good look at the earth moon though. I’m nonetheless waiting on Saturn to become visible to evaluate. The item is reasonably large and a little heavy so don’t think you’ll be able to just drive it around easily, unless you’ve a big trunk.

For the price, it’s certainly worth it, assuming you get it delivered in far better conditions than I received mine. I’m not happy with it but its not like I’m extremely disappointed at it.

BUY Orion StarBlast 4.5 Equatorial Reflector Telescope HERE