Tele Vue Nagler T6 3.5mm 82° Eyepiece - 1.25"
- Focal Length: 3.5mm
- Apparent Field of View: 82°
- Barrel Size: 1.25"
- Eye Relief: 12mm
- Optical Design: 7 Elements in 4 Groups (Nagler Type 6)
- Weight: 0.45 lbs / 204 g
Simulate the exact field of view of the Tele Vue Nagler T6 3.5mm 82° Eyepiece - 1.25" with your specific telescope.
Launch Visual AssistantThe Tele Vue Nagler T6 3.5mm 82° Eyepiece is a specialized high-magnification instrument designed to deliver expansive, sharp views of the solar system's most challenging targets. It leverages the renowned Nagler design to fit a wide 82° apparent field into a compact 1.25" barrel, providing a "spacewalk" experience at magnifications that reveal fine planetary detail, split tight double stars, and resolve globular clusters to their core.
The 3.5mm Nagler T6 uses a sophisticated 7-element optical layout to achieve its signature 82° apparent field of view. This design corrects for aberrations like astigmatism and field curvature, which are often pronounced at the high magnifications this eyepiece produces. The result is a sharp, flat field where stars remain pinpoints from the center to the very edge, allowing you to use the entire view with confidence.
Unlike simpler designs that force you to keep targets perfectly centered, the Nagler's correction gives you the freedom to let objects drift across the wide field. This is particularly useful for planetary observing on a Dobsonian mount, as it extends the time between nudges and creates a more comfortable, immersive session. The compact physical size also means it works well in binoviewers or on smaller, balanced telescopes.
Every air-to-glass surface in the Nagler T6 is fully multi-coated, and the lens edges are blackened to minimize internal reflections. This level of stray light control is critical at high power, where maximizing contrast is the key to seeing subtle features. The high-transmission coatings ensure that the maximum amount of light from the objective reaches your eye, producing a bright, neutral image.
On a target like Jupiter, this translates to seeing more delicate festoons and swirls within the main cloud belts and better definition in the Great Red Spot. For lunar observers, it means picking out tiny craterlets and rilles along the terminator, where the interplay of light and shadow reveals the finest surface textures. The lack of scattered light creates a clean, dark background that makes faint objects "pop" into view.
High-power eyepieces are often difficult to look through, but the 3.5mm Nagler T6 is designed for usability. It features 12mm of eye relief, a comfortable distance for observers who do not wear glasses. This fixed eye relief is consistent across the Nagler T6 line, making the transition between different magnifications feel familiar and intuitive.
To ensure proper eye placement, which is crucial for seeing the full 82° field, the eyepiece includes an adjustable eyeguard. You can raise, lower, and lock the soft rubber eyeguard to the perfect height, which helps block stray light from your surroundings and maintain a steady viewing position. This small ergonomic feature significantly improves comfort during long observing sessions.
With its 3.5mm focal length, this eyepiece is built for nights of good atmospheric seeing. In a telescope with a 1000mm focal length, it yields 286x magnification, a power level ideal for resolving the Cassini Division in Saturn's rings or teasing apart the components of the Double-Double star system in Lyra. The wide field of view provides a generous canvas for these objects, making them feel suspended in space rather than cramped in a narrow field.
The true strength of this eyepiece is revealed when viewing a bright globular cluster like M13. At this magnification, the dense core begins to resolve into a spray of individual stars against a black background. The experience is like flying into the cluster's center, an effect made possible only by the combination of high power and a wide, well-corrected apparent field.
The entire Nagler Type 6 series, from 3.5mm to 13mm, is designed to be nearly parfocal. This means you can switch from the 13mm to the 9mm, and then to the 3.5mm, with little to no refocusing required. This is a significant workflow advantage in the field, as it saves time and preserves your dark adaptation by minimizing interaction with the focuser.
This feature is a testament to the system-level thinking behind the Tele Vue eyepiece lineup. It encourages you to use your eyepieces as a cohesive set, starting wide to locate a target with a lower-power eyepiece and then stepping up in magnification to study it in detail, all without the distraction of major focus adjustments.
This is a specialist's eyepiece, not an all-arounder. Its performance is highly dependent on atmospheric conditions. On nights of poor seeing, the high magnification will simply magnify the turbulence, resulting in a blurry, shimmering view. For this reason, it is best paired with lower-power eyepieces to have options for different conditions.
Furthermore, the 12mm of eye relief is not sufficient for observers who need to wear glasses to correct for astigmatism. While Tele Vue's DIOPTRX is an option, those requiring glasses for viewing will be better served by the Delos line, which offers a longer 20mm of eye relief. The Nagler T6 3.5mm is the right choice when atmospheric seeing is steady and you need maximum resolving power on bright, small targets.
Choosing a high-power eyepiece involves trade-offs between field of view, eye relief, and complexity. Here is how the 3.5mm Nagler T6 fits into the Tele Vue family.
Yes, it is an exceptional choice for planetary viewing on nights of good atmospheric seeing. The high magnification reveals fine details on Jupiter, Saturn, and Mars, while the 82° field provides a comfortable and immersive viewing experience.
The 12mm of eye relief is generally insufficient for observing with glasses. For a high-power eyepiece that accommodates eyeglasses, consider the Tele Vue Delos line, which offers 20mm of eye relief.
The Nagler Type 6 series was designed to be smaller, lighter, and have more eye relief than the original Type 5 designs of similar focal lengths. Both deliver the signature 82° Nagler field of view.
Yes, the Nagler design is well-corrected for fast optical systems like f/5 Dobsonians. It will maintain sharp star images across the entire field of view, even at the edge.
For most telescopes, the 3.5mm focal length provides very high magnification on its own. A Barlow lens would likely push the magnification beyond what atmospheric conditions or your telescope's optics can support, resulting in a dim, blurry image.
It is designed to be parfocal with the other eyepieces in the Nagler Type 6 family (13mm, 9mm, 7mm, 5mm). This means you can switch between them with little to no need to refocus your telescope.
| Product SKU | TV-EN6-03.5 |
| Focal Length | 3.5mm |
| Barrel Size | 1.25" |
| Apparent Field of View (AFOV) | 82° |
| Eye Relief | 12mm |
| Optical Design | 7 elements in 4 groups |
| Coatings | Fully Multi-Coated |
| Field Stop Diameter | 4.9mm |
| Weight | 0.45 lbs / 204 g |
| Height | 3.2 in / 81.3 mm |
| Parfocal | Yes, with Nagler T6 series |
Tele Vue Nagler T6 3.5mm Eyepiece
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