Astro-Tech AT130 EDT f/7 ED Triplet OTA
Manufacturer Part # AT130EDT
Manufacturer Part # AT130EDT
Five inches of ED triplet aperture is where a refractor stops feeling small. The AT130EDT combines a 130mm f/7 triplet objective, a heavy-duty 3.2-inch rack-and-pinion focuser, and a mechanical package built for serious visual observing and astrophotography. It's large enough to resolve fine planetary detail, gather meaningful light from distant galaxies, and support full imaging trains without compromise.
The AT130EDT has earned its reputation through years of use by visual observers and astrophotographers alike. The optical design, focuser, and mechanical package work together as a complete system, making it one of the most versatile refractors Astro-Tech has ever offered.
The AT130EDT is a three-element FK-61 ED triplet. The front objective is an apochromatic triplet with one ED (Extra Dispersed) element for color correction. All surfaces carry fully multicoated antireflection coatings, optimized for the specific glass types. The interior has multiple knife-edge baffles plus micro baffles in the drawtube, and the lens edges are blackened to control stray light. FK-61 is generally considered comparable in performance to Ohara FPL-51 when used in similar optical designs.
The mechanical assembly inside the tube is tight. FK-61 expansion from ambient temperature change is controlled by a precision cell that maintains optical alignment. The objective is sealed — dust, moisture, and temperature swings don't degrade performance over time. In the field, a 130mm triplet needs cool-down time like any refractor, but the thermal mass is manageable — expect 30 to 45 minutes before optics stabilize on a cool night. Like most 130mm triplets, the AT130EDT benefits from 30–45 minutes of thermal stabilization when moving from a warm environment into significantly cooler night air. The scope rewards both.
The AT130EDT focuser is a 3.2-inch (81mm) dual-speed rack-and-pinion mechanism with a concentric 10:1 fine-focus knob — the coarse knob and the fine knob are concentric on the same axis, so you can move between coarse and fine without moving your hand. Travel is smooth and repeatable across the full 85mm range. The drawtube itself is marked in millimeter increments for recording focus positions and for matching backfocus on cameras.
The focuser's 3.2-inch drawtube accepts a large variety of connection systems and handles heavy imaging loads without flexure or image shift. The current production focuser terminates in M92 threads, which connect directly to the AT130EDTRFv3 reducer/flattener or to a T-ring for standard DSLR/mirrorless camera work. Older AT130EDT models (pre-2023) used a 2.5-inch focuser with M63 threads — if you're matching a reducer to an older scope, you need the ATREDT30V2, not the newer v3. The two are not interchangeable.
Built into the focuser is a camera angle adjuster — a rotating collar that lets you frame your target in landscape, portrait, or any angle between without disassembling the imaging train. A large locking knob keeps rotation steady. This is the feature that saves imaging sessions on nights when framing matters or when you're working in tight spaces with multiple cameras on a multi-scope setup.
The AT130EDT weighs 18.5 pounds with the optical tube and its internal cell, plus mounting rings. With dovetail and carry handle, you're moving about 22 pounds — heavy enough to be a serious optical system, light enough that a single person carries it without strain from car to telescope pad. The scope is 27.5 inches long retracted, and 31 inches with the dew shield extended.
The mounting system is built to match. Hinged split tube rings with felt linings let you remove and reposition the scope without tools — a practical advantage for equipment swaps or for repositioning the tube during a long session to reach targets at difficult azimuths. The Losmandy-style dovetail plate is rigid and well-indexed, and it's compatible with most saddle plates in that size class. The carry handle has multiple functions: you lift the scope with it, you store accessories and eyepieces in it, and you can mount a guide scope or off-axis guider to it.
The retractable dew shield extends 4 inches from the objective cell and stores flush against the tube when retracted. In humid conditions, it's a genuine advantage — dew control is easier, and the shield also reduces stray light from overhead sources. For transport, it stows into less than 2 inches of additional length.
The included nylon carrying case is a first-class protection layer for the optics tube. It's designed with padding on the interior, latches that hold firm, and handles for single-person carry. From backyard to dark sky site, this case has earned its place in the box.
130mm of aperture in a well-corrected triplet is a working aperture — big enough to see fine detail, small enough to go places. The Dawes diffraction limit is 0.89 arc seconds. The visual limiting magnitude is 13.2. In good conditions at a reasonably dark site, you're finding galaxies that challenge smaller scopes and planets that reward high magnification.
On the Moon, the AT130EDT shows terraced crater walls, central peaks, and fine rille structure across the entire disc. The terminator reveals texture — Copernicus at 150× shows its terraced ramparts clearly, the Straight Wall is a clean shadow line, and Aristarchus glows like a torch. The lack of false color means the Moon stays crisp and bright-looking even at high power. A 4mm eyepiece at 228× on the Moon is a memorable session — planetary detail you don't forget.
Planets respond well to 130mm of aperture in this focal ratio. Mars shows polar caps, surface markings, and subtle cloud structure when the opposition position is favorable. Jupiter's Great Red Spot is prominent, and the Cassini Division on Saturn is visible at moderate power under decent seeing. Venus displays clean crescent phases with excellent color correction. The triplet design keeps the disc contrast high — no magenta or cyan haloes diluting the view.
Double stars separate cleanly. At 0.89 arc seconds, the AT130EDT splits tight optical pairs that smaller scopes need dark adaptation or averted vision to resolve. Castor resolves at moderate power (5.6 arc seconds). Epsilon Lyrae separates at 150×. Rigel shows its 7th-magnitude companion 9.4 arc seconds away — a test of true contrast, not just resolution. Albireo at low power is a striking color-contrast pair with no false color to mar the view.
Deep sky through a triplet refractor is a different experience than through a reflector or a doublet. The flat field and the high contrast from the triplet design mean you see nebulae with good definition and clusters with sharp stars to the edge of the field. M42 (Orion Nebula) shows fine internal structure — not just the main nebular cloud, but the Running Man nebulosity and the background emission. The Rosette Nebula appears as a full ring structure at low power on dark nights. M31 (Andromeda) spans an impressive width, with dust lane detail visible in good conditions. Messier open clusters — M13, M35, M36, M37, M38 — pop with detail. The lack of a central obstruction means stars appear as clean points rather than diffraction-ring-crossed discs.
"The AT130EDT has been my workhorse for two years. Serious planetary detail, excellent for galaxies, and the build quality feels like it will outlast me."
This owner paired the scope with a ZWO AM5 mount and has logged over 150 hours split between visual observing sessions and astrophotography nights on deep-sky targets. The user flagged the 3.2-inch focuser as a deciding factor for handling heavy camera and filter-wheel combinations without flex.
"For the price, this is the scope that keeps winning. I've compared it to much more expensive triplets and the optics hold their ground. Cool-down takes time, but you plan for it and forget about it."
This owner uses the AT130EDT for both planetary imaging and visual observation, and notes that the triplet color correction on high-magnification planetary work is cleaner than what they'd expected at the price point. The user specifically praised the mechanical rigidity under heavier imaging loads.
While the AT130EDT is fully capable of high-magnification planetary observing, many owners discover its greatest strength is versatility. Spend the early part of an evening exploring large nebulae and open clusters at lower power, then move to planets, double stars, and globular clusters as the telescope reaches thermal equilibrium. A 130mm triplet rewards observers who use the full range of what the aperture can offer.
How does the AT130EDT compare to the AT125EDL doublet?
Different design philosophies at similar apertures and focal length. The AT130EDT is a 130mm f/7 FK-61 triplet with a 3.2-inch focuser and Losmandy dovetail. The AT125EDL is a 125mm f/7.8 FCD-100 (premium glass) doublet with a 2.5-inch focuser and Vixen dovetail. The triplet design has one advantage in color correction — all three primary colors are brought into coincidence at the focal plane, which shows as crisper contrast on planets. The doublet at FCD-100 quality has a smaller thermal mass and cools faster (25-30 minutes vs. 35-45 minutes for the triplet). The triplet has more aperture and a larger focuser for heavier imaging trains. The doublet has more premium glass and fits lighter mounts. Both are excellent scopes.
Which reducer or flattener do I need?
It depends on your focuser version. If your AT130EDT has the 3.2-inch focuser with M92 threads (current production, 2023 onward), you need the AT130EDTRFv3 reducer/flattener. If you have an older AT130EDT with the 2.5-inch focuser and M63 threads, you need the ATREDT30V2. They have different thread sizes and are not interchangeable. Check your focuser drawtube carefully — the thread size is marked. The field flattener option is the AT130EDTFFv3 (1×), which is a flattening optic only, not a focal-length changer.
What mount does this scope need?
The AT130EDT at roughly 22 pounds (with rings and dovetail) needs a mount rated for at least 35 pounds of payload for astrophotography — you need headroom above the tube weight to handle cameras, off-axis guiders, filter wheels, and dew heaters without the mount straining. For visual use, an equatorial mount rated for 30+ pounds works well. The Losmandy dovetail suggests compatibility with heavy-duty mounts — a ZWO AM5, an iOptron CEM60, a Skywatcher HEQ6, or an older Losmandy mount in that weight class. A lighter mount will work for visual observation but will flex noticeably under a heavy imaging camera. Plan on a mount that is overkill for the visual package — you'll thank yourself when you load cameras.
Is this good for astrophotography?
The AT130EDT is one of the most popular imaging refractors in the Astro-Tech line — it shows up regularly in astrophotography forums and imaging equipment discussions because it delivers. The 3.2-inch focuser handles heavy camera systems without flexure. The rotatable drawtube and camera angle adjuster simplify field rotation and framing. At 910mm f/7 on a full-frame or APS-C sensor, you frame larger nebulae and galaxies well. With a reducer, you drop to 728mm f/5.6 for faster exposures and a wider field. The triplet design is favorable for imaging — color correction is flat across the field, which means less post-processing correction needed. Pair it with a quality mount, a guide scope, and a good camera, and you have a capable imaging platform.
The AT130EDT occupies one of the most desirable positions in the refractor world: enough aperture to be genuinely powerful, enough portability to travel easily, and enough mechanical capability to support serious astrophotography. That's why it continues to earn a loyal following among observers and imagers alike.
| Model | Astro-Tech AT130EDT |
| Optical Design | ED Triplet (3-element), fully multicoated |
| Aperture | 130mm (5.1") |
| Focal Length | 910mm |
| Focal Ratio | f/7 |
| Glass Type | FK-61 (Schott FPL-51 equivalent) — NOT FPL-53 |
| Coatings | Fully multicoated on all air-to-glass surfaces |
| Internal Baffling | Multiple knife-edge baffles, micro baffles in drawtube, blackened lens edges |
| Dawes Diffraction Limit | 0.89 arc seconds |
| Visual Limiting Magnitude | 13.2 |
| Focuser | 3.2" (81mm) dual-speed rack-and-pinion, 10:1 fine focus ratio |
| Focuser Travel | 85mm |
| Focuser Threads (Current) | M92 (drawtube), connects to AT130EDTRFv3 reducer or T-ring |
| Focuser Threads (Older) | M63 (pre-2023 models), connects to ATREDT30V2 reducer. NOT interchangeable with M92 models. |
| Camera Angle Adjuster | Built-in, 360° rotation with locking knob |
| Accessory Holders | 2" and 1.25" with non-marring brass compression rings |
| Dew Shield | Retractable self-storing, extends 4" |
| OTA Length (retracted) | 27.5" |
| OTA Length (dew shield extended) | 31" |
| Optical Tube Weight | 18.5 lbs |
| Total Weight (with rings, dovetail, handle) | 22 lbs |
| Tube Finish | White anodize with Aston Martin Grey focuser and appointments |
| Mounting Rings | Hinged split rings (felt-lined) with M6×1 mounting holes |
| Dovetail | Losmandy-style, rigid and well-indexed |
| Compatible Reducer (current focuser) | AT130EDTRFv3 with M92 threads → 728mm f/5.6 |
| Compatible Reducer (older focuser) | ATREDT30V2 with M63 threads → 728mm f/5.6 (NOT interchangeable with v3) |
| Field Flattener Option | AT130EDTFFv3 (1× flattener only) |
| Cool-Down Time (expected) | 35-45 minutes on a cool night for thermal equilibrium |
| Carry Case | Nylon with padding and latches, single-person carry |
| Warranty | 1 year |
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