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On Thursday, May 28, 2026, 9:15 AM, Muriel Dulieu <mdu...@gmail.com> wrote:
I am planning on looking at planetary nebulae next NM with my 18”. Some of them are rather small. My highest power eyepiece is an Explore Scientific 9 mm 100° (I don’t count my Baader Hyperion Mark IV 8-24 mm 50° Zoom because the image is not as nice). I feel like I am going to need higher power. What is your favorite eyepiece for small planetaries? What do you recommend I get?
Hi Muriel,
You are going to get a a variety of recommendations because there are a lot of good eyepiece choices out there.
If you want the last word in resolution, contrast, light throughput, and color rendition I would say the TMB monocentrics are the very best eyepieces I have ever seen or used ( the TMBs are my personal reference set), followed very closely by the Zeiss Abbe II’s.
Also very very good are the older Pentax SMC orthos, and the Claves.
I have heard the Takahashi TOEs are superb but not looked through them yet.
If you want a wider field of view, the Baader Morpheus eyepieces ( eg in 4.5 and 6.5mm) are excellent.
These are just some of the options of course.
I would recommend buying used, you’ll save lots of money.
Best,
Alan
On May 28, 2026, at 9:15 AM, Muriel Dulieu <mdu...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On May 28, 2026, at 12:32 PM, Jacob Ellwood <ellwoo...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On May 28, 2026, at 12:24 PM, Mark Wagner <itsmar...@gmail.com> wrote:
Alan,
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Hi Mark,
Your statement is correct, the eyepieces I listed are all excellent lunar and planetary viewing, and popular with that crowd.
All the features that those eyepieces have are also helpful in viewing small deep sky objects. Having fewer lenses and fewer lens groups makes subtle nebular features easier to see via providing less light loss, and makes seeing stars and stellar features, for example the faint central star in M57, easier to discern in the simple well made Orthoscopic or Plossl vs a widefield like an Ethos. The widefield gives you that aesthetic wow of seeing the object floating in space, but the design of simpler well made eyepiece can show you more detail in the object. Please note Muriel has been hanging out with Steve (she went straight to the top ! :), so she is likely hoping to see some things that are at the edge of visibility - you need the best eyepieces possible for that.
The Ethos, and most well made wide field eyepieces, I do love, but they are not the last word in detail for deep sky objects. I am not alone in my opinion, you can ask Alvin Huey, Jimi, and others who have seriously compared and tested eyepieces on DSOs.
Best,
Alan
On May 29, 2026, at 7:36 AM, Mark Wagner <itsmar...@gmail.com> wrote:
I remembered last night that Muriel's telescope is an Obsession 18" like mine and not driven. In that case I do agree about high power eyepieces with a wide field to not have to chase the object constantly, and have enough drift time relax and look. I use an original 7 Nagler for high power and love it. Is your scope driven Alan?
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From: Pawan Singh <pa...@pinger.org>
Date: May 30, 2026 at 3:12:28 PM PDT
To: "The Astronomy Connection (TAC)" <sf-ba...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [TAC] Favorite eyepiece for planetary nebulae
Reply-To: sf-ba...@googlegroups.com
Alan and others
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From: Pawan Singh <pa...@pinger.org>
Date: June 1, 2026 at 12:35:57 PM PDT
To: "The Astronomy Connection (TAC)" <sf-ba...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: Fw: [TAC] Favorite eyepiece for planetary nebulae
Reply-To: sf-ba...@googlegroups.com
Thanks Alan and Alvin.
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On Jun 1, 2026, at 1:16 PM, 'Alan Agrawal' via The Astronomy Connection (TAC) <sf-ba...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sf-bay-tac/D347C9D7-FF1F-43B8-B270-3151DE62895B%40yahoo.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sf-bay-tac/29ce7673-9615-4538-91ab-0aea3836aacen%40googlegroups.com.