Canadian Telescopes
Your Basket is Empty
View Basket
Wish List
 
 
Shop By Brand
Shop By Type
Accessories
Adapters & Cables
Barlow Lenses
Cases & Covers
Dew Control
Diagonals
Drives & Controllers
Eyepieces
Finder Scopes
Flashlights
Focusers
Books & Charts
Mounts & Tripods
Mount Accessories
Observing Aids
Telescope Tune-Up
Software & DVDs
Spectrometers
Spotting Scope Accessories
Solar Observing
Photometers
Astrophotography
Binoculars
About Us
Thousand Oaks - Full Aperture Glass Solar Filter TYPE 2+ for TeleVue Ranger

Thousand Oaks - Full Aperture Glass Solar Filter TYPE 2+ for TeleVue Ranger


Type 2 Plus: Made with high quality hand select glass coated with our exclusive Solar II Plus. The most durable glass filter on the market. 

Item# TO3500
Submit Your Review
Item No: TO3500


FREE SHIPPING

Tell a Friend



Type 2 Plus: Made with high quality hand select glass coated with our exclusive Solar II Plus. The most durable glass filter on the market. Transmission is 1/1,000th of 1% (Optical Density 5). Great for both visual and photographic use. Solar image is yellow-orange. Guaranteed fifteen years.


Frequently Asked Questions

WHICH FILTER IS THE SAFEST? All our filters, except for the lighter density photographic version, are completely safe for
unlimited visual use. If handled with care and common sense, all will last a minimum of 20 years to life.

CAN MY TELESCOPE OPTICS GET HOT OR DAMAGED? No, all the heat and intense light is blocked before it can enter the telescope. Your telescope may get warm from sunlight shining on it, not from the small amount of visual light transmitted through the filter.

WHAT DETAIL CAN I SEE? Sunspots and surface granulation are the two main features. The only detail that cannot be seen with a standard filter are prominence and flares which require our highly specialized H-Alpha filter.

IS FULL APERTURE BETTER THAN OFF-AXIS (REDUCED APERTURE)? For telescopes up to 5" aperture, off-axis is not an advantage. However, larger apertures suffer more from daytime atmospheric turbulence. This turbulence is magnified by the aperture. Perfect daytime "seeing" only occurs about 1% of the time. Off-axis increases the focal length and reduces the turbulent effects. As a rule of thumb, order off-axis if your telescope has a focal ratio f/7 or lower in the 6" to 8" aperture range, or if it's larger than 8" aperture. The solar image is not darker with reduced aperture as we allow for this in the coating density. When viewing through the eyepiece, the field of view is not reduced; it looks the same as full aperture. Reduced center aperture is used for refractors. If full aperture is still preferred, it can be stopped down using a simple mask as conditions dictate.
Submit Your Review