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An Orion barlow lens is an effective means of 
obtaining higher powers from short-focal-length 
telescopes. It also allows use of longer focal-
length eyepieces to achieve a given power. 
Longer-focal-length eyepieces usually have lon-
ger eye relief than shorter focal-length eyepieces, 
making viewing more comfortable. This can be a 
real benefit for eyeglass wearers, especially, 
enabling them to see the whole field of view at 
higher powers, when normally they cannot.
And there’s another benefit of using a barlow 
lens: it can actually improve eyepiece perfor-
mance, providing sharper images and reducing 
edge-of-field optical aberrations. 

Use of Orion Barlow Lenses

The barlow lens is typically inserted between the 

diagonal and the eyepiece, for refractors and Schmidt-Cassegrain 
telescopes (

Figure A). For reflectors, the barlow inserts directly into 

the eyepiece holder of the focuser drawtube (

Figure B). In the 

position shown in both A and B, a 2x barlow provides a magnifica-
tion factor of two, a 3x barlow, a magnification factor of three, etc. 
Alternatively, a barlow lens can be placed before the diagonal, that 
is, between the telescope and the diagonal (

Figure C). In this case 

the barlow’s magnification factor is increased by about 50%. So a 
2x barlow placed between the telescope and the diagonal provides 
about a 3x magnification boost. Some barlows will not properly fit 
after the diagonal, so this alternate placement is desirable. (Our 
Shorty barlow, which has a shorter barrel, fits nicely in most diago-
nals.) However, be advised that for some barlow and eyepiece 
combinations, focus cannot be achieved with the barlow placed 
before the diagonal. 

Power Limitations

While a barlow lens will increase the magnification of a telescope, 
there is a limit to how much magnification is useful. It depends on 
the telescope’s aperture, the quality of the optics, and on the out-
door “seeing” conditions, which vary from night to night. Generally, 
the maximum practical magnification a telescope can deliver is 
about 50x per inch of aperture (diameter of the main lens or mirror). 
Any higher and the images seen will just be blurry and dim. Seeing 

conditions (i.e., steadiness of the atmosphere) often limit the useful 
magnification to much less than 50x per inch of aperture. 
So, for example, if you have a 3” reflector, the maximum useful 
magnification will be about 150x under very steady sky conditions. 
Say the scope has a focal length of 700mm; a 10mm eyepiece will 
provide 70 power. Using a 2x barlow with that eyepiece would yield 
140 power, which is very close to the scope’s magnification limit 
under excellent seeing conditions, and on most nights may simply 
be too much. Using a 3x barlow would not be recommended 
because that would yield 210 power—way too much for this 
scope—resulting in a degraded image. You’ll have to experiment on 
any given night to see how much power your scope and the prevail-
ing seeing conditions will permit. 

Care of Your Barlow Lens

Care should be exercised when using all optical and mechanical 
telescope accessories. Keep your barlow in a protected environ-
ment when you’re not using it. Avoid touching the lenses and 
coatings. If the outside of the lens should become dirty, you may 
want to clean it. Blow off all loose dirt with a blower bulb. Use only 
optical lens tissue and good-quality lens fluid. Wet a folded tissue 
and gently wipe the surface of the lens. Immediately use a second 
piece of lens tissue to gently dry the lens off. Do not rub or apply 
pressure, as this may scratch the lens if dust or grit is present. 

IN 017  Rev D 03/09

Figure B

:  

Barlow in typical 

reflector

Figure C

:  

Barlow placed  

before diagonal  

(typical refractor)

Figure A

:  

Barlow placed  

after diagonal

INSTRUCTION MANUAL

One-Year Limited Warranty

This Orion product is warranted against defects in materials or workmanship for a period of one year from the date of purchase. This warranty is 

for the benefit of the original retail purchaser only. During this warranty period Orion Telescopes & Binoculars will repair or replace, at Orion’s 

option, any warranted instrument that proves to be defective, provided it is returned postage paid. Proof of purchase (such as a copy of the 

original receipt) is required. This warranty is only valid in the country of purchase.
This warranty does not apply if, in Orion’s judgment, the instrument has been abused, mishandled, or modified, nor does it apply to normal wear 

and tear. This warranty gives you specific legal rights. It is not intended to remove or restrict your other legal rights under applicable local con-

sumer law; your state or national statutory consumer rights governing the sale of consumer goods remain fully applicable. 
For further warranty information, please visit www.OrionTelescopes.com/warranty.

Corporate Offices:

 89 Hangar Way, Watsonville CA 95076 - USA

Toll Free USA & Canada:

 (800) 447-1001 

International:

 +1(831) 763-7000

Customer Support:

 support@telescope.com

Copyright © 2020 Orion Telescopes & Binoculars. All Rights Reserved. No part of this product instruction or any of its contents 

may be reproduced, copied, modified or adapted, without the prior written consent of Orion Telescopes & Binoculars.

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