So I'm thinking about buying a telescope. I've wanted one pretty much ever since I saw Saturn, the Moon, and even Halley's comet through my neighbour's telescope when I was a kid. But I never know what to look for.
I don't want to buy something too small and be under-whelmed by it, but I also don't want to spend a bunch of money on something that could very well end up collecting dust in my closet (right next to my exercise equipment and VHS cassette collection).
I would like to try astrophotography (at least with the Moon and planets, I know deep space objects require higher end telescopes and cameras). I've got a Canon Rebel DSLR that is several years old... I'm assuming I can get an adapter to attach it to the telescope.
I was originally looking at the
Celestron NexStar 127 SLT but I've seen complaints about the mount not being the greatest. It's probably "good enough" for me now, I just don't want to regret it and wish I spent a bit more on something better.
I then started looking at the Celestron NexStar
5SE and
6SE. The 8SE is way out of my price range (even the prices of the other two are a bit more than I want to spend). The 5SE is the same size as the 127 SLT, but I'm not sure if that means they both give the same quality of views. But one of the websites I've looked at has a sale on both SE telescopes that would save me about $120, which would make the 6SE the same price that the 5SE normally is.
The 5SE has a built in "wedge", the 6SE does not. From what I understand, the wedge is only helpful for long exposure photography which I probably won't be doing. But you never know.
So I guess what I'm wondering is: will I see a huge difference between the 6SE and the 5SE (or even the 127 SLT)? Is it worth spending an extra couple hundred dollars to make a blurry image of Jupiter just a little bit less blurry? Should I stop looking at Celestron altogether and look at something else instead?
My biggest fear is that I'll buy a telescope, look through it and say "Meh. That's it?". I'm hoping Hubble hasn't spoiled me.