Digital microscopes

UglyCasanova

Lifer
Mar 25, 2001
19,275
1,361
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I'm looking to buy a digital microscope for my son for Christmas. Celestron makes a few, and I'm wondering if anyone has had any experience with them or one from any other brand. I'm not looking for one that can see at a cellular level, although if they exist within my price range that is definitely a bonus.

I want to keep it under $100 (Amazon has these at a decent price right now), and I want it to be digital so he can hook it up to his laptop to take pictures. I would imagine this is going to be used primarily on bugs.

The two I'm looking at are the Celestron Amoeba Digital Microscope and the Celestron Handheld Digital Microscope Pro.

I'm leaning towards the latter because it looks to have a better camera on it, but the Amoeba looks "cooler" so for him that might be a plus.

Any suggestions or recommendations?
 

UglyCasanova

Lifer
Mar 25, 2001
19,275
1,361
126
The Pro is $20 more. I think I'm going to end up getting that one if there aren't any recommendations of other brands.
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,911
34,040
136
The Amoeba has built in transmitted light for looking at slides if that is important. You can buy sets of prefab slides for it. The Pro is a zoom scope which is a plus, particularly at low magnification. Personally, I'd go with the Pro with the bigger camera. I think looking at found objects and stuff around the house would be more interesting than looking at slides. You could rig up transmitted light for the Pro without too much difficulty. You can make your own slides if you have the patience and don't mind the risk of slicing your fingers off. :p
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
The Amoeba has built in transmitted light for looking at slides if that is important. You can buy sets of prefab slides for it. The Pro is a zoom scope which is a plus, particularly at low magnification. Personally, I'd go with the Pro with the bigger camera. I think looking at found objects and stuff around the house would be more interesting than looking at slides. You could rig up transmitted light for the Pro without too much difficulty. You can make your own slides if you have the patience and don't mind the risk of slicing your fingers off. :p
What was memorable for me, I think it was in 7th grade, was getting some water from a local pond, putting it in a jar with some hay and old grass for a few days, and then having a look at that water underneath a microscope.
There was quite a variety of small single-celled things in there, including one type that was particularly large for a cell. Darned if I can remember its name though. :\
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,911
34,040
136
The Pro is $20 more. I think I'm going to end up getting that one if there aren't any recommendations of other brands.

If you're not set on digital and your son does have an interest in biology then the Brock Magiscope is worth looking at. We'd probably get one if we didn't already own three microscopes and a bunch of hand lenses. We might get one anyway. :biggrin:
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,911
34,040
136
What was memorable for me, I think it was in 7th grade, was getting some water from a local pond, putting it in a jar with some hay and old grass for a few days, and then having a look at that water underneath a microscope.
There was quite a variety of small single-celled things in there, including one type that was particularly large for a cell. Darned if I can remember its name though. :\

Paramecium are pretty big. We bought one of these projector microscopes specifically to have pond creatures swimming across our walls. We ended up donating it to a nature center as there isn't a whole lot of pond water happening in Tucson.
 

UglyCasanova

Lifer
Mar 25, 2001
19,275
1,361
126
The Amoeba has built in transmitted light for looking at slides if that is important. You can buy sets of prefab slides for it. The Pro is a zoom scope which is a plus, particularly at low magnification. Personally, I'd go with the Pro with the bigger camera. I think looking at found objects and stuff around the house would be more interesting than looking at slides. You could rig up transmitted light for the Pro without too much difficulty. You can make your own slides if you have the patience and don't mind the risk of slicing your fingers off. :p

Ok I'm new at this, what is transmitted light and the benefits of it? I doubt he will be doing much in the way of slides, especially since the magnifying power of these isn't all that great. I don't think he would be able to see anything in pond water with either of these...? It would be neat if so, but I think given the capabilities of them he will be looking at and taking pictures of bugs that he finds.
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,911
34,040
136
Ok I'm new at this, what is transmitted light and the benefits of it? I doubt he will be doing much in the way of slides, especially since the magnifying power of these isn't all that great. I don't think he would be able to see anything in pond water with either of these...? It would be neat if so, but I think given the capabilities of them he will be looking at and taking pictures of bugs that he finds.

Transmitted light is light that shines up through a transparent/translucent specimen from the bottom. The Amoeba model has a light built into the base. The Pro and Amoeba both have incident light sources which shine light onto the specimen from above.

This is what pond water looks like at 200x. Keep in mind that with a ~$100 microscope you probably won't get the same clarity as I suspect the scope doesn't have a condenser for the light source. A condenser is a lens beneath the specimen that focuses the light onto the specimen, yielding a clearer image.

We use our low power microscope with incident light far more than the transmitted light scopes. There's just more to look at.
 
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IGBT

Lifer
Jul 16, 2001
17,976
141
106
what a great idea. much better then the usual mindless iCrap kids get now a days.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
Paramecium are pretty big. We bought one of these projector microscopes specifically to have pond creatures swimming across our walls. We ended up donating it to a nature center as there isn't a whole lot of pond water happening in Tucson.
It wasn't one of those. It was almost like an elongated funnel, or a tube that narrowed along its length.
I'm fairly sure it was unicellular.
 
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Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
The name's.....I don't know if it's familiar or not. I came across a few images of that while trying to figure it out myself, but those photos do look familiar. That's probably it.
I remember that it was slightly blue, and just visible to the naked eye.
 
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disappoint

Lifer
Dec 7, 2009
10,132
382
126
I have this one. It has a 5mp sensor. The other one you showed only has 1.3Mp. I got mine from a local Microcenter for the same price as online retailers like Amazon. I like it, it works very well.

ImageGen.ashx
 

KLin

Lifer
Feb 29, 2000
30,439
751
126
I have a celestron 44302 I bought in 2009. Its 2mp

They probably have updated models

MKnhZkO.jpg
 

UglyCasanova

Lifer
Mar 25, 2001
19,275
1,361
126
I have this one. It has a 5mp sensor. The other one you showed only has 1.3Mp. I got mine from a local Microcenter for the same price as online retailers like Amazon. I like it, it works very well.

ImageGen.ashx

This is the one I'm thinking about picking up. I'm guessing it works well for bugs, rocks, etc..? Those would be things he would be interested in.
 

disappoint

Lifer
Dec 7, 2009
10,132
382
126
This is the one I'm thinking about picking up. I'm guessing it works well for bugs, rocks, etc..? Those would be things he would be interested in.

Yes, you can even view diatoms in pond water if you want to, even though the light is from above or from the side.

It has 2 focal points. One is at ~20-30x and the other at ~200-300x magnification, depending on your monitor size. You can measure the actual magnification with the little specialty ruler that is included. Take a pic of the ruler, then measure the size on the screen and you can calculate the magnification. This also helps identify the size of the specimens you will be viewing later.

Also you can crop more with 5Mp than you can with 1.3Mp.

Keep in mind that at the higher magnification you will have a very shallow depth of field. Have fun!