Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Alvaro Vaquero
I bought this telescope as a guider for my
SCT and occasional wide field imaging.
However I have to admit the images I've
taken with it are simply breathtaking. Vivid
colors and pin point stars. Extremely solid
construction and reliable. The focus moves
smoothly and precisely even when loaded
with the heavier CCD camera. Even the
looks are beautiful!
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: George Ingle
The EON 80 is a little masterpiece of
engineering and performance. I have
been using my 8" SCT for sometime
and wanted a smaller grab and go for
those nights when I just wanted a
quick look at the night sky. I also
wanted a better guide scope to
replace my ST80. I had read many
reviews of various APO OTAs and
quickly found that I could easily
spend more for these scopes than my
8" SCT had cost. Anyway, I finally
decided on this little gem and have
not been disappointed. The quality of
its workmanship and images are very
impressive. The two speed focuser
works very smoothly and has been
indispensable when focusing for AP.
First light was done on my DSLR
tripod, just for a quick look and I had
simply planned on looking at Jupiter
for a few minutes. An hour later, I
was still sitting on the ground gazing
at night sky... I had found what I was
looking for. A few nights later I
decided to mount the EON on my CG5
to see if I could get it to balance. I
used just one 11lb weight pushed
almost to the top of the weight bar,
but with the scope, finder and DSLR
attached for AP, voila! I was in
business. If you have smaller
weights, you'll be able to get a better
balance, but my setup was originally
purchased for the 8" SCT, guide
scope, and DSLR. I've done some test
imaging with the EON using just the
DSLR and the results were
impressive. I also purchased the
Orion 8x40 Illuminated Finder for the
EON and they are simply made for
each other. I look forward to many
more nights using this setup for
quicking imaging and viewing. I
wanted a high quality, precision
instrument that would provide years
of enjoyment and I believe I found it
with the EON 80. Great job Orion.
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Bill Olear
Beautiful design and finish. The dew
shield glides into position. I mounted
it on my SCT and easily found and
observed Uranus from Long Island. Can't
wait to take shots of M 31 and other
deep sky objects.
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Jim S
The shipping box and packaging are well
engineered. The contents are nicely
protected. The telescope case was of
finer quality than I had anticipated! the
carrying case is very attractive sporting
a very comfortable padded case handle
and solid metal hinges. Opening the
case revealed no mentionable odors due
to the thick foam case padding. There
are several compartments of removable
foam for securely storing a couple 1.25"
or 2" eyepieces. The foam is precut to
allow the depth of the holes to be
adjusted if desired and a couple more
rectangular compartments for accessory
storage and a pair of case lock keys.
The scope itself was wrapped in a thin
layer of tissue paper then bagged in
clear plastic bag and tied off with a gold
twist tie. The gold twist tie was a nice
touch. I really felt like I was opening up
something special (without feeling like I
had paid extra for it which is an even a
better feeling). The fit and finish was
extrodinary. The scope itself Gloss black
with chrome accents. There wasn't a
blemish or fingerprint on it (except for
mine which were all over it after about 2
seconds). Nicely done Orion. Focuser,
focuser knobs, and graduated extension
tube are beautifully constructed and fine
focus precision has really been achieved
here. Even the 2" to 1.25" adapter is
precison made and finished identically to
the scope. Brass compression rings
secure accessories in place. The lense
was coated well with no visual
imperfections noticed and the thick metal
lense cover with felt lining as to not
scratch the paint fits securely. The
extendable dew shild glides smoothly
and stays in place. The removable
mount foot also has cork inlays to
prevent marring for a secure mount
attachment. No complaints on the
mechanical construction/build quality.
Now about the view... Tonight (Sept
15th '08) was a full moon and clouds
cleared which gave me a chance to
exercise this scope. I coupled my
Canon XSi camera directly to the scope
for primary focus photography using a
standard t-ring adapter. The image
comes into focus with the drawtube
almost fully extended (the drawtube is
out to 7), with about 1 cm of further
extension to spare) and the view... The
view... holy cow! No chromatic
aberation (meaning no purple halos
around a very bright full moon) was
noticed. Fine focus knob was extremely
useful and the pics came out great to my
eyes. I didn't even have the scope and
camera mounted to a mount! The moon
was so bright though the exposures were
very short ~1/1000s at ISO 100. I
really couldn't be happier with the
scopes' performance. Now if that Atlas
mount would just go on sale... Orion, let
me know where to send a couple pics!
These are ones that I am proud of and
you should be too. Well done.
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: amr
I bought this awesome tube 1 month
ago and since then it rocks my nights
out. It's crisp and brilliant views
throughout.
I think its the best regarding the price
and the customer service. The moon
rocks through it, also Jupiter makes my
nights out more amazing. although I'm
still a newbie to astroimaging it's still a
great scope for it. Thanks for the scope.
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Thom
The EON star tested well and the real-
world
views certainly backed-up the star test.
Star
images were very tight, globulars were
well
resolved, planetary and lunar details
very crisp
and contrasty up to 170x, which was the
most I
could generate with the eyepieces and
barlow I
had on hand. Given the image
brightness and
sharpness I saw under good, but not
great
seeing, I would expect that 250x on
lunar and
planetary targets would not be a
problem for
this scope.
The internal baffling of the scope is
good, with
almost no scatter noted with Saturn and
Mars
just off-axis. The built-in, retractable
dew shield
alone kept the EON 80ED dew-free for
4+ hours
of observing on a typically damp,
northwest
Pennsylvania mountaintop night.
The dual-speed focuser was not quite
perfectly
smooth in course-focus mode, but was
butter-
smooth in the fine-focus mode, not quite
a
Feather Touch, but very, very close.
Happily, even when viewing the moon
with the
EON 80ED, I noted virtually no chromatic
aberration and visually that was a real
point of
concern for me in buying a 2-element
apo, after
having owned several high-end 3-
element apo
scopes over the years. I can only say
that I am
very impressed at what an 80mm two-
element
system that has FPL-53 lens glass can do.
Another big concern for me was, could I
be
happy with a scope this small. I'm
thankful to
club friend who brought his old "original"
Orion
80ed to a club meeting one night to view
a Mars
opposition a while back, that opened my
eyes to
what an 80mm scope can do. In short,
I'm
convinced .... small is beautiful, I'm very
happy
with the EON 80ED. It may not perform
"miracles", but it does everything that
one could
ever ask of an 80mm apo and then
some.
If you're looking for a airline-portable,
grab-n-
go scope that can do everything from
drinking in
5.2 degrees of Milky Way star fields,
clusters
and nebulae to probing the mountains of
the
Moon or the rings of Saturn at over well
200x,
the EON 80ED may well be your cup of
tea.
I'm no longer into imaging, but I suspect
the
EON 80ED (given the visual results and
its
feature set) will be a big hit as an
imaging scope
too. I should also mention that the 2"
dielectric
star diagonal that I ordered with the
scope is
also a first-rate piece of equipment.
The scope is beautifully machined and
finished,
very solidly built, comes with a nice hard-
shell
case and for (the price) is a real
bargain. Take it
from a guy who has owned some of the
best
scopes ever made, the EON 80ED is an
exceptional scope at an exceptional price.
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Graham Fyffe
This is my first small refractor and I
must say I
am not disappointed. Even under the
light polluted skies of Connecticut I have
been able to
push the magnification up to 200x and
split
Epsilon Bootes and got nice views of M81
and
M82.
One caveat - I also bought the Orion
Versago
Alt-Alz mount with this and although it
does fit
directly on the mount it places the mount
for the
finder scope essentially underneath the
scope in
an unusable spot.
(Note from Orion: Using the optional L-
Bracket, #5047, will allow you to position
the telescope in the traditional
orientation so that the finder scope is at
a more comfortable viewing angle.)
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Bob Noelle
The EON 80 ED is IMHO an incredible
piece of hardware. This little refractor
feels great in your hands substantial but
not heavy. Fit and finish are excellent ...
no scratches, smudges, or dust! The
dual speed focuser is very smooth and a
joy to operate. Optically, the EON is far
superior to my 6" achromat starfields
are sharp across the field of view, lunar
and planetary views are high contrast
with virtually zero color fringing.
I looked at lot of high quality scopes in
the 80mm apo category and chose the
Orion for features, performance and
price ... I am not disappointed! This little
grab-and-go is simply excellent and will
get tons of use. It's a keeper! Kudo's
Orion!
Orion EON 80mm ED Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Reviewer: Abe Schwartz
After reviewing the specifications of
available small refractors on the
market, it appeared that the EON 80
would meet my requirements for a
traveling scope: lightweight, compact,
and relatively inexpensive should
something happen to it during transit.
The duel-speed focuser was a deciding
factor. In addition, the recommendation
of Rod Norden, who has helped me in the
past, did not hurt.
The EON 80 did meet all my requirements
with a few pleasant surprises. Six and a
half pounds are heavier than I expected,
due apparently to the FLP-53 ED glass,
and the carrying case was smaller. The
claims on the quality of the machining
and optics were also exceeded. Under a
full moon, the scope was able to split
each of the epsilon 1 and 2 Lyr binaries
at 157x in the same field. The
collimation was excellent showing clear
and symmetric airy rings around each of
these stars at this magnification.
I am looking forward to taking this
scope on the road and seeing how it
performs under dark skies.
Abe Schwartz, PhD
San Juan, PR