

🌠 Elevate your night sky game — see what others miss!
The SVBONY 2" UHC Filter is a premium multi-coated optical glass accessory designed to dramatically improve image contrast by filtering out light pollution, especially in urban environments. Compatible with all 2-inch telescope eyepieces via a sturdy aluminum threaded frame, it enhances deep sky observations and astrophotography by isolating key emission lines, making faint nebulae and celestial objects pop with clarity. Lightweight and portable, it’s a must-have for serious amateur astronomers seeking sharper, more vivid night sky views.












| ASIN | B07R38KR1P |
| Best Sellers Rank | #5 in Telescope Filters |
| Brand | SVBONY |
| Coating Description | No Coating |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (73) |
| Enclosure Material | Aluminum |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 2"L x 2"W |
| Manufacturer | SVBONY |
| Photo Filter Factor | 4 x |
| Photo Filter Size | 2 Millimeters |
| Screen Size | 2 Inches |
| Special Effect | Enhancing |
| Thread Size | 48 Millimeters |
| Viewfinder Type | optical viewfinder |
| Warranty Description | We provide 1 year warranty for SVBONY telescope accessories and 30 days no reason to return. Beyond the warranty period: We still offer maintain service, buyers are required to afford corresponding costs. We processed in the most hassle-free way possible.You just need to contact with us on Amazon ,we will reply you within 12 hours |
| Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
J**E
Great buy
I’ve only had a couple of sessions worth of imaging with this filter, but the results so far are great. I’m close to downtown in a major city and to a street light and I definitely notice a difference in picture quality with this filter. It’s great for nebulae and really brings out the reds. It’s not so good for galaxies and star clusters as far as I can tell. Just starting to really dabble in filters and this one was worth the buy.
J**.
Amazing value.
So far it's been an amazing little filter. For the price I think it would be hard to beat. I'm working in a bortle 5 with a lot of neighborhood lights and got a beautiful quick 3 min sub of the Orion nebula. I'm looking forward to trying it out on some more difficult targets soon. Picture was taken with a zwo asi533mc pro at f5.
J**K
INCREDIBLE performance, you won't regret at all
The virtue of high contrast filter (or city light filter) is to coat some relevant materials on very flat glass, selectively transmitting wavelength that suits the filter's purpose. So ideally speaking if you live in Bortle class 1 area, you don't need it. But there are only a few places you will find near your city even in the western side of the US. Therefore this filter can do the right job for you, for most cases. Indeed, non-flat glass and uneven coating will mar your filter and in the end, it mars the quality of an optical image projected on your eyepiece or the camera sensor. For that, perhaps very high-end quality astrophotography might want something more expensive filters. As an amateur, this filter is just perfect. You may lose some lights as filters wouldn't have 100% transmittance for necessary wavelengths. Despite such light loss, transmitting only the necessary wavelengths is important as your camera sensor doesn't want to be saturated by unnecessary wavelengths hitting your sensor. One of the best representative unnecessary wavelength shall be city light. Longer you expose through one shot of the picture, more importance of the filter you fill find. Attached is Trifid nebula,stacked many images taken 30 seconds for each.
D**E
Good Value
Use to reduce overexposed stars on long exposure photos. Works well on weak color nebulas, especially red ones. Minimizes the blue halos around bright stars typical with achromatic lenses. Drops out a bit of the dark blues though, so caution on targets containing blues. However it worked well on the Trifed nebula as the attached photo shows.
E**C
As adverthis decent little filter
Works decent for cutting out excess light pollution. I'm in a bortle 8-9 area.
M**L
Unacceptable - now acceptable
Glass had strange oily marks resembling spaghetti noodles on both sides. Was this some kind of disgruntled employee at the factory? Was this a previously returned item? I'll never know. I tried my best to clean it, but several spots remain. Replacing immediately. Edit: amazon exchanged it for another and this one is perfect.
J**S
👎
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B**F
Pretty Good For The Price
This SVBONY Telescope Filter 2 inches UHC Filter is not bad, but not great, but not bad. It is certainly worth the price you pay for it. If you are getting into using 2" filters for astrophotography, this is a decent starting point. Results have been decent. I live in a Bortel 3-4 sky area and it indeed does cut through some of the light polluted skies. I also have the SVBONY CLS and UV/IR Cut filters, which are both decent for different deep sky objects. Don't know if it would work well in anything above a Bortel 4, but is worth the dough if you don't want to spend a couple hundred dollars (or more) for a higher end filter such as the Optolong L-eNhance, which is superb.
J**G
Perfecto para astrofotografía, ayuda a contrastar la imagen
Ž**O
I used the SVBONY 2-inch UHC filter for visual observation, and this is my first UHC filter. I was able to see the M94 galaxy, which I had never seen before against the bright sky background, with my 8-inch SCT. This filter makes the sky appear much darker while keeping most nebulae visible. I noticed significantly better contrast with the M17 Omega Nebula, though I feel that some fine details might have been filtered out and lost. I would not recommend it for visual observation of globular clusters like M3 and M5. The image was only slightly less sharp, and I thought I saw some reflections. The craftsmanship is excellent; the glass appears to be top quality and very clean. In my video, you can see that this filter gives an image with a slight violet tint. I can't compare it to a high-end UHC filter because I don't have one, but for its price, I think this filter is excellent. It will most definitely help you see faint deep-sky objects that you might have wondered if they were even there.
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