ScopeBuyer

Telescope Comparison

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P vs StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P telescope

Sky-Watcher

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

150mmNewtonian Reflector
VS
StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA telescope

StellaLyra

StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

200mmNewtonian Reflector

The specs are close. The experience isn't.

Affiliate links — we earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.

First light

Sky-Watcher · 150mm · £399

The custom-rig optical tube

  • 150mm newtonian reflector — optical tube only, no mount included
  • 750mm focal length at f/5
  • Requires a compatible mount before you can observe anything
  • Best for: observers who already own a suitable mount or are building a specific imaging rig
  • Not a complete purchase — budget at least £100–300 extra for a mount before observing
View Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

StellaLyra · 200mm · £469

The custom-rig optical tube

  • 200mm newtonian reflector — optical tube only, no mount included
  • 1000mm focal length at f/5
  • Requires a compatible mount before you can observe anything
  • Best for: observers who already own a suitable mount or are building a specific imaging rig
  • Not a complete purchase — budget at least £100–300 extra for a mount before observing
View StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

Jump to full specs ↓

The full picture

The numbers that separate these two scopes — and what they mean at the eyepiece.

Aperture

150mmvs200mm

StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA gathers 1.8× more light. On bright targets — Moon, Saturn, Jupiter — you won't notice. On fainter targets — dim galaxies, faint globular clusters — the gap is real.

Focal length

750mmvs1000mm

StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA's longer focal length reaches higher magnification with the same eyepiece — better reach for planetary detail. Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P's shorter focal length gives a wider true field — better for large open clusters and extended nebulae.

Focal ratio

f/5vsf/5

Same focal ratio — the same eyepiece gives equivalent magnification and true field in both scopes.

Mount type

No mount — OTA onlyvsNo mount — OTA only

Neither scope includes a mount — both require a separate purchase before you can observe.

Weight (OTA)

4.6kgvs9kg

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P's optical tube is 4.4kg lighter. Relevant if you plan to use it on multiple mounts or carry the tube to dark-sky sites separately.

Optical design

Newtonian ReflectorvsNewtonian Reflector

Both are Newtonian reflectors — the same optical formula. Any performance difference comes from collimation quality, focal ratio, and eyepiece choice, not the design itself.

At the eyepiece

Sky-Watcher

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

The Moon fills the field at low power with more detail than you'll have time to explore on any given night. Saturn's rings are unmistakable from the first session; in good seeing, the Cassini Division — the dark gap between the A and B rings — is a genuine target at higher magnification. Jupiter shows two equatorial cloud bands clearly, the four Galilean moons changing position night to night. The Orion Nebula (M42) shows clear structure — nebulosity spreading around the Trapezium, which splits at moderate power. The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) shows a concentrated core clearly. The Hercules Cluster (M13) shows some resolution at the edges at higher magnification.

StellaLyra

StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

The Moon fills the field at low power with more detail than you'll have time to explore on any given night. Saturn's rings are unmistakable from the first session; in good seeing, the Cassini Division — the dark gap between the A and B rings — is a genuine target at higher magnification. Jupiter shows two equatorial cloud bands clearly, the four Galilean moons changing position night to night. The Orion Nebula (M42) shows wide nebulosity with the Trapezium splitting cleanly into four points at 80×. The Hercules Cluster (M13) begins to resolve into individual stars at the outer edges at higher magnification. The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) fills a wide-field eyepiece; the bright core and inner disc are obvious, and on a dark night the dust lane becomes visible with careful looking. The StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA gathers 1.8× more light than the Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P — a difference that's marginal on bright targets but visible on fainter ones: dimmer galaxies, faint globular clusters, and extended nebulosity that sits below the threshold of the smaller aperture.

The real tradeoff

Both scopes are capable. The question is which one fits the way you actually observe.

Both scopes are solving a similar problem in a similar way. The differences are real — build quality and optical refinement — but these show up after several months of regular use, not on the first night. Pick the one whose design best matches how you actually plan to observe.

The dark side

Every scope has a personality. Here’s where each one gets difficult.

Sky-Watcher

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

  • No mount included

    You cannot observe until you buy a separate compatible mount — add at least £100–300 before you have a working telescope.

  • Nothing to look through on day one

    Until a mount arrives, the optical tube is a piece of glass you cannot point at the sky.

StellaLyra

StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

  • No mount included

    You cannot observe until you buy a separate compatible mount — add at least £100–300 before you have a working telescope.

  • Nothing to look through on day one

    Until a mount arrives, the optical tube is a piece of glass you cannot point at the sky.

Which is right for you?

Two different buyers. Two different right answers.

The custom-rig optical tube

Sky-Watcher · Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

You’ll love this if…

  • You already own a compatible equatorial or alt-az mount — this is the optical tube you've specifically chosen to put on it
  • You're building an imaging rig piece by piece and know exactly what you need at the end of a focuser
  • Choosing an optical tube independently of the mount gives you more flexibility over your overall system

This will frustrate you if…

  • You buy it without fully accounting for the mount — add at least £100–300 to the purchase price before you have a working telescope
  • You expected a complete package and didn't realise this is a bare optical tube that cannot be used without a separate mount

The custom-rig optical tube

StellaLyra · StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

You’ll love this if…

  • You already own a compatible equatorial or alt-az mount — this is the optical tube you've specifically chosen to put on it
  • You're building an imaging rig piece by piece and know exactly what you need at the end of a focuser
  • Choosing an optical tube independently of the mount gives you more flexibility over your overall system

This will frustrate you if…

  • You buy it without fully accounting for the mount — add at least £100–300 to the purchase price before you have a working telescope
  • You expected a complete package and didn't realise this is a bare optical tube that cannot be used without a separate mount

Our verdict

These two are closer than most comparisons on this site. The spec differences are genuine — mount type, focal ratio — but neither is the wrong answer for a typical observer starting out.

If I had to choose between them: the Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P is the scope most people will be using regularly six months from now. The StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA rewards you more once you know what you're doing — it's worth revisiting after your first year.

Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

View Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P

StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

View StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA

Affiliate links — we earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.

Deep field: Full specifications

Every data point, for those who want to go further.

Full specifications

Fields highlighted in blue or amber indicate the better value for that spec. Data is manufacturer-stated and may vary.

How much can it see?

SpecSky-Watcher Quattro 150PStellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA
Aperture

The most important spec — bigger = more light = better views

150mm200mm
Focal Length

Longer = more magnification potential

750mm1000mm
Focal Ratio

Lower f-number = wider field of view; higher = more magnification per eyepiece

f/5f/5
Optical Design

The type of optics — each design has different strengths

Newtonian ReflectorNewtonian Reflector
Coatings

Better coatings = more light transmission through the optics

Parabolic primary mirror, fully multi-coated

How do you point it?

SpecSky-Watcher Quattro 150PStellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA
Mount Type

The mechanical system that holds and moves the telescope

None (OTA only)None (OTA only)
GoTo

Computer-controlled pointing — finds any of thousands of objects automatically

Tracking

Motor keeps objects centred as the Earth rotates — essential for astrophotography

The focuser

SpecSky-Watcher Quattro 150PStellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA
Focuser Size

2" accepts wider eyepieces and gives better low-power views

2"2"
Focuser Type

Rack-and-pinion is standard; Crayford and dual-speed are smoother

Dual-speed Crayford (10:1 reduction)2" dual-speed linear bearing Crayford

Size & weight

SpecSky-Watcher Quattro 150PStellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA
OTA Weight

Optical tube only — useful for comparing mount load capacity

4.6kg9kg
Tube Length
900mm
Tube Material
Steel

What's in the box?

SpecSky-Watcher Quattro 150PStellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA
Finder Scope

Helps you locate areas of the sky before switching to the main eyepiece

8x50 straight-through multicoated
Diagonal

Tilts the eyepiece 90° for comfortable viewing — useful on refractors

Blue highlight: Sky-Watcher Quattro 150P advantage · Amber highlight: StellaLyra 8" f/5 Newtonian OTA advantage · Greyed cells: equal or subjective.