Celestron GPS11 with fungus

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Paul Campbell avatar

Found a used Celestron GPS11 for 750, including a working mount, in my town but it has a few bits of fungus on the corrector plate and primary mirror. For the foreseeable future, it would be used for planetary imaging. Maybe one day I could get an eq mount for it.

Worth it or hard pass? How hard is it to clean the corrector plate and mirror? I seem to be getting mixed reports on how complicated of a procedure this is. The seller is pretty well known guy in the community around here and I bought my c8 from him.

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Tony Gondola avatar

For that price I would say yes, it’s a good deal sort off. If the fungus has not actually etched the glass the you are in good shape, it can be removed from the corrector plate. I dilute solution of Hydrogen Peroxide will do it. The primary is a bigger problem because whatever you do to remove the fungus will likely harm the aluminum coating of the mirror. Not that big a deal because the mirror can be recoated but something to take into account. It won’t be free to do.

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Lynn K avatar

The correcter is not that hard to clean. Make sure you place the corrector back in with the mark on the correcter edge at 3 o'clock looking from front of scope. Mark the shimes placement and replace in the same spot. There is no need to remove the secondary.

Use 100% cotton balls on the mirror, wiping from center out to edge. There are many liquid cleaners altenitives. Never use a dry cloth/ cotton ball and blow off all dust first.

Lynn Krizan

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Paul Campbell avatar

Tony Gondola · Jun 19, 2026, 08:55 PM

For that price I would say yes, it’s a good deal sort off. If the fungus has not actually etched the glass the you are in good shape, it can be removed from the corrector plate. I dilute solution of Hydrogen Peroxide will do it. The primary is a bigger problem because whatever you do to remove the fungus will likely harm the aluminum coating of the mirror. Not that big a deal because the mirror can be recoated but something to take into account. It won’t be free to do.

Thanks, Tony. Good to know.

Paul Campbell avatar

Lynn K · Jun 19, 2026, 09:04 PM

The correcter is not that hard to clean. Make sure you place the corrector back in with the mark on the correcter edge at 3 o'clock looking from front of scope. Mark the shimes placement and replace in the same spot. There is no need to remove the secondary.

Use 100% cotton balls on the mirror, wiping from center out to edge. There are many liquid cleaners altenitives. Never use a dry cloth/ cotton ball and blow off all dust first.

Lynn Krizan

Thanks, Lynn. The idea of shims make me nervous but maybe i’m over thinking it. I’ll look at some videos

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