Celestron Skymaster Pro Ed 15x70 Kikare
Recensioner av Celestron Skymaster Pro Ed 15x70 Kikare
Baserat på 167 recensioner
Way TOO Heavy! Extremely hard to watch anything with these weighing your arms down. Not enjoyable.
Way TOO Heavy! Extremely hard to watch anything with these weighing your arms down. Not enjoyable.
bratmeyerv
1 mars 2025
it's big but not as heavy as I thought. clarity is insane...craters on the moon..hellooo... whales and dolphins amazing. constantly in use.super happy.
it's big but not as heavy as I thought. clarity is insane...craters on the moon..hellooo... whales and dolphins amazing. constantly in use.super happy.
Claudia-Craig
29 januari 2025
Excellent product, this was a Christmas present for my husband and he is thrilled with the binoculars. Thank you for an easy order and prompt delivery, very happy
Excellent product, this was a Christmas present for my husband and he is thrilled with the binoculars. Thank you for an easy order and prompt delivery, very happy
ChristinePack
13 januari 2025
Good product magification great but so good close up objects cannot be veiwed (<20m)
Good product magification great but so good close up objects cannot be veiwed (<20m)
Nicholas
3 januari 2025
I saw Ganymede and Europa, two of the four Galilean Moons of Jupiter with these binoculars. The other two (Io and Callisto) were either transiting the front of the planet, or behind. The view of our own Moon is nothing short of spectacular. The astronomy people tell me that binoculars are not the best tool for planetary/Lunar observations - and they are right. A good telescope, mounted on its tripod provides a far more stable view of the heavens than binoculars. That's mainly down to the stable tripod standing, and, of course, the superior magnification of the more powerful lense of the telescope. So, with the Celestron SE 6, for example, you can see the individual cloud strata of Jupiter, and Saturn's rings. You can't see the Jupiter's clouds with any binoculars. Still, with a tripod, you can achieve some stability with these Celestron binoculars, and spot most planets, and some of their natural satellites.
I saw Ganymede and Europa, two of the four Galilean Moons of Jupiter with these binoculars. The other two (Io and Callisto) were either transiting the front of the planet, or behind. The view of our own Moon is nothing short of spectacular. The astronomy people tell me that binoculars are not the best tool for planetary/Lunar observations - and they are right. A good telescope, mounted on its tripod provides a far more stable view of the heavens than binoculars. That's mainly down to the stable tripod standing, and, of course, the superior magnification of the more powerful lense of the telescope. So, with the Celestron SE 6, for example, you can see the individual cloud strata of Jupiter, and Saturn's rings. You can't see the Jupiter's clouds with any binoculars. Still, with a tripod, you can achieve some stability with these Celestron binoculars, and spot most planets, and some of their natural satellites.
Paulo
24 september 2024