My recommendation is to get an inexpensive zoom eyepiece to go with your new telescope. There are quite a few under $100 that are available. Even though I have a nice Baader Hyperion 8-24x zoom, this year I purchased a Svbony SV135 7-21mm zoom. It's a lot lighter, about six times cheaper, and a decent performer, getting mostly good reviews on Cloudy Nights for its price, and I agree. I got one for my brother, too, and he loves it. [Note: If you wear glasses or want a slightly wider view, you might want to go with the Svbony SV191 7.2-21.6mm zoom, which is a bit more expensive and not quite as sharp.]
With a zoom, you will get a feel for how different objects in the sky look in various eyepiece focal lengths, which determine the power, and what works best in your telescope. (Telescope focal length ÷ eyepiece focal length = power. For example, a telescope with a 750mm focal length with a 10mm eyepiece in it will give you 75x.) If you do eventually upgrade your eyepieces, after you get to know the sky better and know what you like to look at, you can keep the zoom and use it when you want to travel light, for quick sessions, planetary and lunar detail, double stars, and for outreach. That's what I do.Zoom eyepieces like the SV135 have a narrower field of view than many comparably priced eyepieces and generally aren't quite as sharp or well corrected for aberrations, although this one does tolerably well. By twisting the barrel, you are able to zoom into exactly the desired power, replacing a large set of eyepieces with just one.
As you progress, you might want wider or sharper views, which come at a cost. Televue eyepieces, the premier example of consistently high end eyepieces, are expensive because they give you well-corrected wide views, which don't come cheap. But a relatively cheap zoom allows you to experiment with different powers on different objects so you can find what works best in your telescope for you. Then you have a better idea of what you want if you decide to upgrade. This also allows you to take full advantage of your new telescope immediately.
Well, maybe not immediately. More critical than upgrading eyepieces is learning the sky and how to find things in it with your telescope. See the Space Walk Among the Stars sound guides, which will help you find some wonderful deep space objects, as well as posts on determining directions in your telescope, how to set up your telescope for starhopping, the Astrohopper app, and others.The internet is full of observing guides. I would start by visiting the Sky & Telescope site, with their Interactive Sky Chart and lots of information for beginners. You'll find tons of information there. Also visit Cloudy Nights, the premier amateur astronomy forum. The Beginners Forum will keep you occupied for many cloudy nights to come and provide a place to ask questions.
Left: Screenshot from Sky Safari Pro. Apps like this help you locate objects in the night sky and can even control your telescope if it is go-to equipped.
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