Finderscope
A finderscope is an accessory sighting device used in astronomy and stargazing, typically a small auxiliary refracting telescope/monocular mounted parallelly on a larger astronomical telescope along the same line of sight. The finderscope usually has a much smaller magnification than the main telescope, thus providing a larger field of view, useful for manually pointing the main telescope into a roughly correct direction that can easily place a desired astronomical object in view when zooming in. Some finderscopes have sophisticated reticles to more accurately aim the main telescope and/or even perform stadiametric measurements.
Function and design
Finderscopes contain mechanisms to properly align them with the main telescope's line of sight. Accomplishing this alignment varies based on the design of the finderscope and its mount: usually on amateur telescopes it is done by three or six adjustment screws.Finderscopes usually come with a designation of the form A×B, where A is the magnification and B is the aperture of the finderscope's objective lens in millimeters; for example, a 6×30 finderscope means a finderscope with a 30 mm objective and a magnification of 6×. This designation is in the same format used by most binoculars.
A 6×30 finderscope is typically considered the minimum useful size for a magnifying finderscope on an amateur telescope. An 8×50 or larger finderscope is preferred, which allows sighting of fainter objects.
Most finderscopes have one of three viewing orientations:
| Type | Eyepiece mount | Image orientation |
| Standard | Straight through | Upside down and reversed |
| Right-angle | 90 degrees | Backwards |
| RACI | 90 degrees | Correct |