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DwarfLab Dwarf Mini smart telescope review

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The DwarfLab Dwarf Mini is a compact, beginner-friendly smart telescope that takes direct aim at competitors like the ZWO Seestar S30. It’s essentially a very small 1.2-inch/30 mm refractor telescope controlled by a smartphone, but instead of the user looking through an eyepiece, it takes images of the night sky.

It does that with an image sensor, using its onboard computer and software to first automatically align itself with the night sky to identify objects, and then capture short-exposure images which it stacks into a single, ever-improving image. Impressively, this enables it to capture star clusters, galaxies and even faint nebulae from the middle of a city — something no optical telescope will get you a view of in such a light-polluted environment.

Specifications

Image resolution: 2 MP
Aperture: 1.18 inches (30 mm)
Focal length: 150 mm
Storage: 64 GB
Field of view: 2.45 x 2.14 degrees (telephoto)
Mount: Alt-azimuth and EQ mode
Battery: 4 hours
Weight: 1.8 lbs (840 g)

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