BBC Sky at Night Magazine

StellaMira 90mm ED triplet apochromat­ic refractor

A sturdy, stylish scope that works wonders for visual observing and astro imaging

- WORDS: TIM JARDINE

The StellaMira 90mm ED telescope on test this month is a triplet lens apochromat­ic refractor introduced by First Light Optics. We were especially interested to receive our review model, as the company has always been upfront on its website blog about any issues with triplet telescopes, with the promise of only releasing new ones when production methods allow consistent­ly good results. It was fair to say, given that stance, that we had high expectatio­ns for the StellaMira 90mm ED.

The packaging of the StellaMira 90mm ED is compact; it is supplied in a neat, lockable, black carry case. The telescope has a sturdy constructi­on, with a glossy carbon-fibre tube and dew shield. It certainly looks and feels like a quality piece of equipment, with anodised red aluminium highlights, black tube rings and a carry handle. Although the carbon-fibre tube keeps the weight down to a mere 3.3kg, the StellaMira 90mm ED doesn’t feel flimsy or compromise­d in any way whatsoever.

The 90mm lens of the StellaMira telescope has a focal length of 540mm, making it a speedy f/6, and perfectly suited to astrophoto­graphy, especially with its focuser design. There's no reason why it can't also be used as a high-quality, wide-field visual instrument. Indeed, it’s fitted with a removable holder (for 2-inch and 1.25-inch eyepieces or a diagonal) with brass compressio­n rings.

Sharp focus

To test the StellaMira 90mm ED’s astrophoto­graphy abilities we paired it with a StellaMira 0.8x reducer/ flattener. This threads firmly onto the focuser, after unscrewing the eyepiece clamp, and the M48 thread on the rear allows a camera to be attached with a spacing of 55mm, which is ideal for DSLR cameras.

With the reducer in place the telescope offers a coma-free image field up to APS-C sensor size. Test pictures were taken using a CCD camera and the back spacing was a few millimetre­s out, resulting in slightly skewed stars in the corners. But a selection of reference images (taken with a full-frame DSLR and the correct spacing) showed the true flat field on offer, which covers 36mm x 24mm. All the stars, except those on the outer edges of the full-frame image, appeared round and sharp.

When it comes to imaging, the focuser arrangemen­t is particular­ly impressive. The whole

focuser body rotates, allowing the control knobs to be convenient­ly positioned, while a separate camera rotator allows adjustment of the camera angle. Fast optical systems have a very shallow depth of focus, requiring precision movements; and in this regard we found the rack and pinion design to be smooth and impressive­ly accurate, especially when making micro-adjustment­s for perfect focus

Testing the limits

Winter skies offer a host of targets, but the Pleiades, M45, and the Orion Nebula, M42, offer pretty much everything an astrophoto­grapher might encounter, including bright dominating stars, faint reflection nebulosity, rich and thin emission nebulae, and tight star groupings that test the telescope’s limits.

The hot blue stars within M45 can produce unwanted artefacts (haloes around stars, irregular diffractio­n patterns or internal reflection­s) in poorly configured optics, while the tight star grouping within M42’s Trapezium Cluster can be mangled into an indistinct blob, but our images were clear of these issues. Instead, the StellaMira 90mm ED produced excellent results, which were consistent with the impressive 0.972 Strehl ratio rating given for this particular telescope (a measure of its optical quality). There were even tantalisin­g hints of the Trapezium stars ‘E’ (Theta1 (θ1) Orionis E) and ‘F’ (Theta1 (θ1) Orionis F) in M42 during the camera focusing procedure.

Briefly swapping the camera for an eyepiece was similarly rewarding and delivered excellent views of Jupiter, even using a Barlow lens to boost a 4.5mm eyepiece up to a boundary-stretching 240x magnificat­ion. This produced a sharp, detail-rich image, free of any unwanted colour aberration­s, again testifying to the high-quality optics.

Overall, the StellaMira 90mm ED Triplet more than met our expectatio­ns. It’s a competitiv­ely priced, stylish telescope that offers excellent views and high-quality astro imaging results in a convenient, well thought out package.

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A detail-rich image of M42, captured with the StellaMira 90mm ED and an Atik 460ex OSC camera, using 20x 60" exposures and 20 minutes of integratio­n
▲ A detail-rich image of M42, captured with the StellaMira 90mm ED and an Atik 460ex OSC camera, using 20x 60" exposures and 20 minutes of integratio­n
 ?? ?? The Pleiades, M45, captured with the same setup – using 600" exposures and a total integratio­n of 3 hours and 40 minutes – reveals vibrant, rich textures
The Pleiades, M45, captured with the same setup – using 600" exposures and a total integratio­n of 3 hours and 40 minutes – reveals vibrant, rich textures

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