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Meade ETX-TC Telsescopic
 
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Meade ETX-TC Telsescopic

by Meade
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Technical Details

  • Automatic locating and tracking of thousands of objects
  • AutoStar Suite Astronomer Edition Software on DVD
  • Built-in Barlow lens flips into position when needed
  • Now includes Super Plössl eyepieces (SP9.7mm, SP26mm)
  • More Power Than You'll Ever Need
  See more technical details

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 32 x 23 x 10 inches ; 29.1 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 20 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
  • ASIN: B000BTPVHW
  • Item model number: 0805-04-21
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,322 in Camera & Photo (See Top 100 in Camera & Photo)
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: June 5, 2007

Product Description

Aperture: 80mm(3.1-Inch). Focal Length: 400mm. Focal Ratio: f/5. Internal Flip-in Barlow lens, #494 AutoStar handbox with over 1400 object library, Field Tripod, AutoStar Suite Astronomer Edition Software and Instructional DVD, Series 4000 Super Plössl Eyepieces (9.7mm, 26mm).Meade’s 80mm diameter ETX delivers excellent light gathering for increased image brightness and greater detail. Moon craters by the hundreds; cloud belts on Jupiter, and Saturn’s rings are just the beginning of what can be seen with this telescope. Meade’s brainy AutoStar® computer solves the stargazer’s two biggest challenges in navigating the heavens with a computer telescope: aligning the telescope with the night sky and finding celestial phenomenon in the vast starry firmament. Right out of the box with a simple initialization, AutoStar makes finding the sky’s elusive jewels virtually as easy as pushing a few buttons. Observe land targets or over 1400 sky objects in stunning high resolution, and learn about the sky with AutoStar's extensive descriptions of astronomical objects displayed on its screen. FEATURES AutoStar Computer Controller Automatically guides your telescope to over 1400 objects in the night sky, all at the push of a button. Large 80mm Objective Lens Delivers crisp, bright images and greater detail. Internal Time Chip Set-up is now quicker and easier. Time and date are now precisely calibrated at our factory.


 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

37 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Possibly the Best Value for a Starter Telescope, January 22, 2006
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This review is from: Meade ETX-TC Telsescopic (Electronics)
I was looking for the best starter telescope that I can also use to photograph the moon, and after much due diligence, I decided on Meade ETX-80 as the best value overall, and am very happy with the purchase. However, the fundamental shortcomings of a cheap telescope (which is pretty much any telescope under $2000 or so) become immediately apparent, and you'll likely be plotting an upgrade to a model that's more powerful, solid, and flexible, e.g. Meade LX200GPS.

PROS:
- The package is fully featured, and out of the box, you can get set up and get going quickly. The assembled telescope (with the tripod) is light and portable, but built with high quality, and no problem after a month of heavy use.
- The planetarium software that comes with the package is useful and fun. If you buy the Meade LPI camera, you can hook it up to your PC/laptop and use it as a webcam and record videos during day or night.
- The two lenses that come with the package are high-quality and useful for most casual observations. The built-in Barlow is definitely useful for an instant-zoom as well.
- The package comes with its own tripod, cables, software, and controller. Don't forget to order batteries, but I'd recommend getting the AC adapter (order the ETX-70 compatible AC adapter from telescope.com).
- You can use ETX-80 for both day- and night-time viewing and photography. You can also order lunar and solar filters to observe/photograph the moon and the sun respectively.
- Photography with ETX-80 is easy, especially with the flip mirror that allows easy transition between viewing thru the lens and photographying with an attached camera. If you buy the right T-mount ("Meade 64ST" on Amazon) and T-ring for your camera, then attaching/detaching the camera to/from the telescope is very easy. You'll have a lot of fun photographing the moon at various exposure, cropping/zooming, color-correcting, and printing/displaying.
- Unusually excellent and complete documentation and FAQ on Meade website, which even includes video instructions on setting up the tripod. Meade deserves much kudos for a truly outstanding effort in the documentation front.

CONS:
- The focusing knob is poorly designed in terms of its location and feedback. Even a light touch on the knob shakes the telescope and does not allow fine control, making it easy to overshoot the focus range - one will be spending a LOT of time fiddling with the knob and cursing under the breath.
I ordered the ScopeTronix Flexi-Focus (from telescope.com) that's compatible for ETX-70, but had to return it after finding that it's NOT compatible with ETX-80. (If anyone found a better focusing accessory for ETX-80, please post here, provided that it's not the exorbitant electronic focusing mechanism.)
- Accessories for ETX-80 are limited at best, and many vendors themselves are confused as to which ETX-70 accessories are compatible with ETX-80 and which are not, so be sure to find out before you order accessories.
- Manual adjustment of the telescope is another source of major frustrations, especially if you want to adjust the telescope just slightly up/down/right/left, due to the still resistance of the turning mechanisms.
- At the same time, if you hook up a camera to the telescope (using Meade 64ST T-adapter and Canon T-ring that you can order from Amazon), weight of the camera overcomes the resistance of the telescope's vertical lock, thus tilting the telescope upward.
- Be sure to read the manuals before extending the legs of the tripod for the first time, or you may end up damaging the legs.
- The LED display on the controller is virtually invisible in daylight, so trying to test it for the first time in daylight is difficult - you'll have to wait until night time.

BTW, the Meade LPI digital camera offers superior imaging of the moon and planets over camera (in my case Canon Digital Rebel Xt). The housing of the LPI camera is rather poorly designed, so it'd rotate under the weight of USB cable and thereby rotating the image while you're trying to focus and capture the image on your PC/laptop.

Overall, it's a great starter package for a very attractive price that allows you to have fun and gain experience in observing/photographing, so that by the time you saved enough money to buy a REAL telescope, you'll be a much more knowledgeable and experienced amateur astronomer/astrophotographer.
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28 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Bad for the Price, January 1, 2006
By 
This review is from: Meade ETX-TC Telsescopic (Electronics)
Got this scope for Christmas. I was plenty excited about getting one after years of wanting a scope. I am a total amatuer in the field. The last scope I had was a long red Tasco many many years ago. I will review this just as I see it. I've never been near a fancy expensive scope, let alone use one. I put it together real quick. Put the batteries in (obviously any electronic field equipment is going to require batteries).

I got to set it out finally after a week of overcast skies. I turned it on and set up the time, date, daylight savings time, zip code and other initial settings. I used the included compass/level and set it to North. I went through the 'easy align' setup where it pointed to two stars. I don't really know the star names or locations but I would try to adjust it to the nearest brightest star I could see. The first and second alignments did not take. It was way off in the end. Eventually on the third try I realized that I should turn the daylight savings time 'off' and reset the clock. This fixed me right up. Once I did my third alignment, I found Saturn first time. I had purchase, as an accessory, the zhumell 1.25" EYEFIL set and started from the 25mm set and worked my way down the the 4mm. I found the higher the magnification I got the more the slop in the gears and mechanisms I noticed. When I would turn clockwise on the focus the scope's view would skew right. I learned I could over compensate slightly and refocus in the other direction to bring back the image. Its not so bad with the 9mm size lense but with the 4mm, you lose sight all together and you have to reacquire the target which shows other issues. When you skew the drive left it will send your view down slightly and then move as commanded. Again not so bad with the 9mm but borderline frustrating with the 4mm. The up and down skew does the same thing. Skew up and the view will move to the right some. It sounds like a nightmare of slop but in reality its liveable with some practice. It got cloudy on me so I packed it up for the night (that and I was freezing at 38 degrees)

Day two. Now that I was more familiar with it I dug in to the book and checked the faq sections on Meade.com. I calibrated the motors and checked alignments and mechanisms. I oiled the built in 2x barlow and it worked a lot smoother. I had to reset the azumith dial and I checked closely why I was seeing the slop. Its due 100% to construction. The forks are not sturdily built as they look and warp with the torque. There is a setting in the options for changing the backlash. I did not notice any improvement in the slop with this setting at max. I took it out again on a nice clear night. I had no problem getting it aligned in and I had a much easier time centering in and keeping targets in place even going to the higher powers with the barlow engaged. I used the Guided Tour option and I looked at Saturn, glimpsed Mars setting, The Great Orion Nebula, the Paliedes, and Cluster stars. I don't know how they did it but this little controller has a ton of information and it told me everything about what I was looking at. It has the ability to find whatever your looking for which is terrific for me.

It can also track satillites including the International Space Station. It says that satillites are best viewed in the morning or evenings because of the sun reflecting on the object. I haven't yet tracked any sats but I commanded it to find the ISS and it skewed into position and had a countdown timer. Apparently when the counddown is finished I look into the eyepiece for the target and push enter for it to follow. Is that cool or what? The government don't need to spend billions of dollars on fancy satillite tracking equipment. Just hire a friendly neighborhood nerd, pay him minimum wage and give him this telescope. Even Goerge W could use this!

With a communication cable you can use the included software to update its database for more recent finds or launches or firmware updates. I haven't loaded the software yet so I can't say if its good or not. I've heard there has been many issues with the software installing and right now I don't want the headache.

ALL TOGETHER, this is a fun telescope even with the high power slop. It is the best price/ bang for your buck at only $270. You cannot expect a super quiet, metal geared, cast fork, monstrosity for 270!. Instead expect a smart, compact, lightweight, 'plastic, tin, aluminum, made in korea' scope for the passing amatuer that will show you Saturn's rings, right out of the box and have enough money left over for fun accessories that can transfer over in a few years to something bigger and more expensive!

Really 3.5 stars in my book.
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30 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Poor way to allocate your telescope dollars, February 22, 2007
By 
This review is from: Meade ETX-TC Telsescopic (Electronics)
This scope seems to have, on the surface, a lot to recommend it- decent optics, computer guidance, etc., and to the novice amateur astronomer, it looks like a pretty good deal. Meade's pushing it as a slightly smaller version fo their very popular ETX90- but is it?

The ETX 90 is a long-focus Maksutov-Cassegrain- their attempt to clone the Questar at a fraction of the cost. The ETX doesn't really compare to the Questar (not surprising, as Questar spends more on the optics than the ETX costs!) but it's still pretty good for the money. An ETX90 can deliver sharp images up to perhaps 200x under ideal conditions.

The ETX80, though, is a very different animal. It's a short-focus 80mm refractor- sort of like half of a pair of binoculars- on a computer drive. And a short focus scope of this size is really only good up to about 40x magnification before secondary color starts blurring the image. Yes, you can see the rings of Saturn, but a decent pair of 7x50 binoculars will show you that as well.

The computer guide is less useful than it might seem; it takes time to set up and align and is really not needed on such a low powered telescope. You don't need a computer to find the moon, the larger planets or the brighter objects that this scope is capable of seeing. What you have, in essence, is a $150 telescope on a $150 computerized mount. In that price range, it's silly to spend half your budget on automation.

If you have $300 for a telescope, Amazon also sells Orion Dobsonian reflectors in various sizes that have far more light gathering ability and can see much dimmer objects. They're also steady as a rock. They may not have the same high-tech coolness factor, but they never need batteries, and for the typical beginner they're a much better choice.
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