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It's as if someone cranked up the "contrast" and "sharpness" dials on the night sky. In our SVP 3.6 Clear-Aperture reflector, Jupiter's cloud bands and Great Red Spot resolve dramatically from the surrounding blackness. The Moon bursts with bold lights and darks and high-definition relief. Gone is the "mushiness" you always took for granted. Even deep-sky objects stand out more starkly against the background, enabling detection of detail that can't be picked up even in larger reflector and Cassegrain scopes.
Credit the "off-axis" optics. Unlike a typical Newtonian reflector, the SVP 3.6CA uses an asymmetric primary mirror—made in the USA—that diverts light "off axis" to a secondary mirror tucked just inside the tube. The secondary lies completely outside of the incoming light path, so it doesn't "obstruct" any light like the center-mounted secondary of a standard reflector does. The result: killer contrast like that of a refractor. But like a reflector, there's zero chromatic aberration, so images are razor-sharp and color-pure. Images like you'd get only with the very finest apochromatic refractors costing several thousand bucks!
The Pyrex primary mirror features enhanced aluminum coatings with >96% reflectance. The optical tube rides on the sturdy SkyView Pro equatorial mount with adjustable stainless steel tripod. Also available as tube assembly only, without accessories.
Clear, unobstructed aperture gives this reflector the performance of a wallet-busting "apo" refractor — for a fraction of the cost. Clearly, it's a winner! One-year limited warranty.
Sky & Telescope Magazine — April 2005
"The views it provides are first-rate.
"[A] double-pass auto-collimation Ronchi test image of the SVP 3.6CA shows straight, parallel bands, indicating high-quality optics.
"The double star Castor looked absolutely textbook with nice, round diffraction disks and subdued first diffraction rings .... Ringed Saturn was simply gorgeous with its globe displaying several subtle cloud bands and its rings split by the stark blackness of the Cassini Division.
"The [Moon's] terminator lay just to the lunar east of the magnificent craters Ptolemaeus, Alphonsus, and Arzachel, and the whole region was bursting with spectacular detail .... On that morning, nearly every place on the Moon's surface yielded interesting and wonderful sights. It was, in short, one of the best nights of lunar observing I've had in recent years."
"So how did the SVP 3.6CA hold up against my [$4,000, 3.5"] Questar? Not only were the views in the Orion scope better in every way, but they were better by a significant margin!
"If you've been considering a high-priced 3- to 4-inch apochromatic refractor, the SVP 3.6CA is an alternative worth looking at."
Please note this product was not designed or intended by the manufacturer for use by a child 12 years of age or younger.
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Download a PDF file of the Instruction Manual for this product. Requires Adobe Reader version 3.0 or higher.