Orion SKYVIEW PRO 120 EQ User Manual
Page 11
 
ments (there are 60 minutes in 1 hour of right ascension). 
The lower set of numbers apply to viewing in the Northern 
Hemisphere, while the numbers above them apply to viewing 
in the Southern Hemisphere.
The Dec. setting circle is scaled in degrees, with each mark 
representing 2° increments. Values of declination coordinates 
range from +90° to -90°. The 0° mark indicates the celestial 
equator. When the telescope is pointed north of the celestial 
equator, values of the declination setting circle are positive; 
when the telescope is pointed south of the celestial equator, 
values of the declination setting circle are negative.
So, the coordinates for the Orion Nebula listed in a star atlas 
will look like this:
R.A. 5h 35.4m Dec. –5° 27'
That’s 5 hours and 35.4 minutes in right ascension, and -5 
degrees and 27 arc-minutes in declination (there are 60 arc-
minutes in 1 degree of declination).
Before you can use the setting circles to locate objects, the 
mount must be accurately polar aligned, and the setting cir-
cles must be calibrated.
calibrating the Declination setting circle
1. Loosen the Dec. lock lever and position the telescope as 
accurately as possible in declination so it is parallel to the 
R.A. axis as shown in Figure 1. Re-tighten the lock lever.
2. Loosen one of the thumbscrews on the Dec. setting circle
(see Figure 11), this will allow the setting circle to rotate 
freely. Rotate the Dec. setting circle until the pointer reads 
exactly 90°. Re-tighten the setting circle thumbscrew.
calibrating the right ascension setting circle
1. Identify a bright star in the sky near the celestial equa-
tor (declination = 0°) and look up its coordinates in a star 
atlas.
2. Loosen the R.A. and Dec. lock levers on the equatorial
mount, so the telescope optical tube can move freely.
3. Point the telescope at the bright star whose coordinates
you know. Lock the R.A. and Dec. lock levers. Center the
star in the telescope’s field of view with the slow-motion 
control knobs.
4. Loosen one of the R.A. setting circle thumbscrews (see
Figure 11); this will allow the setting circle to rotate freely. 
Rotate the setting circle until the R.A. pointer arrow indi-
cates the R.A. coordinate listed in the star atlas for the 
object. Re-tighten the setting circle thumbscrew.
Finding objects With the setting circles
Now that both setting circles are calibrated, look up in a star 
atlas the coordinates of an object you wish to view.
Loosen the Dec. lock lever and rotate the telescope until the 
declination value from the star atlas matches the reading on 
the Dec. setting circle. Remember that values of the Dec. set-
ting circle are positive when the telescope is pointing north 
of the celestial equator (Dec. = 0°), and negative when the 
telescope is pointing south of the celestial equator. Retighten 
the lock lever.
Loosen the R.A. lock lever and rotate the telescope until the 
right ascension value from the star atlas matches the reading 
on the R.A. setting circle. Remember to use the lower set of 
numbers on the R.A. setting circle. Retighten the lock lever.
Most setting circles are not accurate enough to put an object 
dead-center in the telescope’s eyepiece, but they should 
place the object somewhere within the field of view of the find-
er scope, assuming the equatorial mount is accurately polar 
aligned. Use the slow-motion controls to center the object in 
the finder scope, and it should appear in the telescope’s field 
of view.
The setting circles must be re-calibrated every time you wish 
to locate a new object. Do so by calibrating the setting circles 
for the centered object before moving on to the next one.
confused about Pointing the telescope?
Beginners occasionally experience some confusion about 
how to point the telescope overhead or in other directions. In 
Figure 1 the telescope is pointed north as it would be during 
polar alignment. The counterweight shaft is oriented down-
ward. But it will not look like that when the telescope is pointed 
in other directions. Let’s say you want to view an object that is 
directly overhead, at the zenith. How do you do it?
DO NOT make any adjustment to the latitude adjustment L-
bolts. That will spoil the mount’s polar alignment. Remember, 
once the mount is polar aligned, the telescope should be 
moved only on the R.A. and Dec. axes. To point the scope 
overhead, first loosen the R.A. lock lever and rotate the tele-
scope on the right ascension axis until the counterweight 
shaft is horizontal (parallel to the ground). Then loosen the 
Dec. lock lever and rotate the telescope until it is pointing 
straight overhead. The counterweight shaft is still horizontal. 
Then retighten both lock levers.
What if you need to aim the telescope directly north, but at 
an object that is nearer to the horizon than Polaris? You can’t 
do it with the counterweights down as pictured in Figure 1. 
Again, you have to rotate the scope in right ascension so that 
the counterweight shaft is positioned horizontally. Then rotate 
11
Figure 11.
The R.A. and Dec. setting circles.
Dec. setting
circle
Dec. setting 
circle
thumbscrew
(2)
Dec. 
indicator
arrow
R.A. 
indicator
arrow
R.A. setting circle
thumbscrew (2)
R.A.
setting
circle