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instruction Manual

IN 276 Rev. F 10/14

orion

®

 Binocular 

Viewer for 

telescopes

#52071

Congratulations on your purchase of the Orion Binocular 
Viewer. The “BinoViewer” provides superior contrast and detail 
for planetary, lunar, and even solar vistas. If you are trying to 
tease out extra features on Saturn or the craters on the Moon, 
the BinoViewer will deliver the view in 3D-like perspective unlike 
with monocular vision. Planets will appear less like flat discs, 
and more like floating spheres. The lunar landscape will look 
like it is flying underneath the window of your spacecraft. All 
this in greater viewing comfort, since you won’t have to strain 
to close one eye. 
The BinoViewer will work on any telescope with approximately 
4" of inward focus travel. If your telescope has less focus travel, 
you can use the included 2x barlow lens with the BinoViewer; 
this combination only requires approximately 1.5" inward focus 
travel.

How to use the BinoViewer

First, take the BinoViewer out of its case and remove the cover 
caps. The eyepiece holder uses a single thumbscrew and a 
compression ring to ensure the eyepieces are centered in the 
eyepiece holder. This is important to achieve a sharper, merged 
image, especially at high magnifications. The eyepieces must 
be identical to get a clear image. After inserting the eyepieces, 
secure the thumbscrew and bring the BinoViewer to the fo-
cuser of your telescope.

connection to the telescope

Before inserting the BinoViewer into the focuser, make sure 
any adapters or diagonals in the drawtube are secure. The 
BinoViewer weighs much more than an average eyepiece, 
therefore all connections must be extra secure to support it. 
Place the BinoViewer’s chrome barrel into your star diago-
nal (if using a refractor or Cassegrain) or focuser (if using a 
Newtonian) and secure it with the thumbscrew. Now, adjust 
the interpupillary distance of the two eyepieces. Adjust the 
BinoViewer so the center of each eyepiece glass is directly 
in front of each of your pupils. This is done by grasping both 
sides of the BinoViewer and bending them together or apart. 
When the image from each eyepiece becomes a single merged 
image, the interpupillary distance is set for your eyes. You may 
also rotate the entire unit in the focuser so your neck is at a 
comfortable angle.

Focusing

Now you are ready to focus. First focus with your telescope fo-
cuser. If the image looks a little soft, you can adjust the focus 

of each eye individually with the helical focusers at the base of 
each eyepiece holder. Cover your right eye and focus the left 
eyepiece holder by rotating it until the image appears clearest. 
Then cover your left eye and do the same for the right eyepiece 
holder. The BinoViewer is now focused. 
If you rack the focuser all the way inward, and still can’t achieve 
focus, the included 2x barlow lens threaded onto the front of 
the BinoViewer's barrel will usually solve this problem. This will 
likely occur in Newtonian reflectors and some refractors, but 
rarely in Cassegrain telescope designs. 

image orientation

As the light travels through the BinoViewer, the image will be 
rotated 180°. If you observe a mountain scene through the 
BinoViewer, the sky will be on the bottom of the image and the 
mountains on top. However, this image rotation is hardly notice-
able when viewing the night sky. 

use of the 2x Barlow lens

As an extra bonus, the Orion BinoViewer comes standard with 
a high-quality 2x barlow lens. This lens threads onto the front of 
the BinoViewer’s chrome barrel, and doubles the magnification 
of any eyepieces used in the BinoViewer. As noted previously, it 
also reduces the amount of inward focus travel required for the 
BinoViewer to reach focus in a telescope.
Keep in mind, however, that when the barlow lens is employed, 
the field of view and image brightness will be reduced. This is 
fine for viewing objects such as planets, as they are small yet 
quite bright. On the other hand, some deep sky objects, such 
as nebulae, can be dim and wide, so using the barlow lens 
might not yield the best view.

using Filters

Your BinoViewer’s chrome barrel is threaded for Orion 1.25" 
filters. Simply thread the filter onto the barrel and re-focus. The 
BinoViewer’s excellent lunar and planetary views can be fur-

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