Stabilised Binoculars
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Canon 10x30 Image Stabilization Binoculars w/Case, Neck Strap & Batteries
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Canon 12x36 Image Stabilization II Binoculars w/Case, Neck Strap & Batteries
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Canon 18x50 Image Stabilization All-Weather Binoculars w/Case, Neck Strap & Batteries
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US Army Special Forces, Technical Manual, BINOCULAR: STABILIZED, M25, TM 9-1240-408-13&P, (NSN 1240-01-410-7418), 2000
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Canon 4624A002 Is All Weather Binoculars |

Other than M31 what galaxies are generally visible through 10x50 binoculars in the Northern Hemisphere?
I have located where Triangulum Galaxy (M33) should be but even on a very clear night is an extremely faint blur and I am not 100% sure I am not being deceived by a far distant star. Would any of the Virgo Cluster galaxies appear brighter?
One last thing - I am struggling to discern Jupiter's moons. With my binos stabilised the best I get is a slight bulge to one side of the disk which might be caused by an imperfection in focussing.
The key is to get to a very dark sky site. Then, m51, m81, m82, and maybe m33 should be visible, or at least detectable. You just might be able to detect m100 or m86 in the Virgo cluster. These objects should be as high in the sky as possible - so you're not looking through so much atmosphere. A planetarium program will tell you when they transit.
What i mean by detectable is that if you've found the right spot, and there's a bright patch where the galaxy should be, and you move your optics, the bright patch moves with the sky.
Focus is very important in seeing faint things. You can discover this by yourself. Get some faint star into sharp focus. Then defocus it. It should disappear.
Do you have a stable tripod?
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