Okay, I bought an eVscope from @Unistellar It arrived on Friday and last night (11/14) I took it out for a spin for the very first time. Here's a thread that talks about the telescope, how it works and what I saw.
It is a unique telescope with 4.5-inch mirror, but instead of a secondary mirror that sends the image out to an eyepiece there's a camera that takes a photo which you can see in an "eyepiece" viewing area on the side and on the smartphone/tablet which controls the telescope.
Here's what the control interface looks like from when I was observing M1, the Crab Nebula Supernova remnant.
Once you turn on the telescope it quickly identifies where in the sky you are pointing and then it is very easy to choose a target from a list (or input your own coordinates) of objects in the sky. My first target was planetary nebula M76.
You can get a "live" view or let the telescope accumulate light which quickly lets you see colors like in M76 above or spiral arms in a galaxy like this view of M33 - 20 minute exposure.
Focusing the telescope is very easy. There's a Bahtinov mask that is included as part of the dust cover. You simply point at a bright star and then with the mask on adjust the focus until the vertical line goes through the X. Super easy.
Here's are two short exposure images of spiral galaxies NGC 7331 and M74. You can see the spiral arms in M74 in just 2 minutes. Imagine using this at a star party (after the pandemic is over).
I had heard the there was a comet visible in Orion so after using the @NASAJPL ephemeris generator https://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/horizons.cgi  I entered in the coordinates for Comet C/2020 M3 ATLAS. This image shows it as a fuzzy line (from its motion) in an 8 minute exposure.
A 36-second exposure of the Owl Cluster showing star colors. #eVscope
Here's a 10-minute view of the Andromeda Galaxy, M31 from the #eVscope. If you look carefully you can see a dust lane. Eventually I want to shoot a mosaic of this.
The real highlight of my first night with the #eVscope was looking at M42, the Orion Nebula. This view was just 28 seconds. I've seen M42 in many, some huge telescopes. This view made me call out with excitement. The "eyepiece" view was stunning and would be epic at star parties.
Here is a longer view (five minutes) of M42 with my @Unistellar eVscope. I'm pretty happy with my results after just one evening of using it.
You can follow @palomarskies.
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