Walter
Scott Houston wrote of NGC 5371 that "it should be visible in just about
any telescope." He goes on to point out that an 8-inch scope will
reveal "hints of internal detail." He also describes how this galaxy
was apparently mistaken for a new discovery by John Herschel in 1831, NGC
5390, which does not actually exist.
De Vaucouleurs described
its appearance in photographs as "Very small, bright, diffuse nucleus.
Weak bar... Several knotty, filamentary, regular arms with some branches."
After viewing it in my
18-inch f/4.5 I recorded this galaxy as "nice." It displayed a bright,
non-stellar core and I thought I could discern hints of spiral arm structure
in the otherwise uniform oval disk. Don't miss the nearby compact galaxy
group Hickson 68.

This is the view
in a 6-inch at 50x. The galaxies to the left are the brighter members
of the compact galaxy group Hickson 68. North is down and east is
to the right.
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