Here’s the million dollar question; If you had a choice of getting the Canon
IS 12x36 III (new model) or the Canon IS 10x42 binoculars, which would be your
pick (pretend cost is not a factor, ha ha)?
Cindy
From: sas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:sas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
Nick Monkman
Sent: Sunday, 8 November, 2015 9:35 AM
To: SAS
Subject: [SAS] Re: portable telescope
Hi Cindy,
I have the 12x36 Canons. Here's some more info
http://shop.usa.canon.com/shop/en/catalog/binoculars/image-stabilizer-binoculars
http://garyseronik.com/?q=node/25
I have the older model of the 12x36 which is no longer sold - I'd expect that
newer is better when it comes to these. Street prices (e.g. Amazon) are at
least $100 cheaper than what's listed on the Canon site.
Nick
On Sat, Nov 7, 2015 at 4:54 PM, Mary Singer <hari@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I really enjoy my 15x70 Orion resolux binoculars for scanning the moon, the
Orion Nebula,and the like. They are awesome on star clusters too. Mary S.
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 7, 2015, at 4:21 PM, Cindy Fenick <cs.fenick@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Yeah – I REALLY like yours. What were the specs??
From: sas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:sas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
Nick Monkman
Sent: Saturday, 7 November, 2015 2:46 PM
To: SAS
Subject: [SAS] Re: portable telescope
I think the StarBlast 4.5
<http://www.telescope.com/catalog/product.jsp?productId=102010> or the OneSky
<http://store.astronomerswithoutborders.org/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=5&products_id=4&zenid=hclkg2cao6qvctqegdd0rd4276>
(basically anything without a tripod) would also serve. Hard to beat a pair
of stabilized binoculars though for portability and usefulness.