Well, Yale, I'd need TWO of those patches - I use a binoviewer.
The contrast gain vs monocular viewing is astounding!
Fortunately, my Coronado h-alpha filter is securely
screwed into the lens cell of my refractor, and the front element is an energy rejection filter which effectively removes most of the the nastys even before the incoming sunlight passes through the etalon (0.8 angstrom bandpass interference filter centered on hydrogen-alpha at 656.28 nanometers).
Here's one reason I bought a Coronado - their transmission numbers are included from far IR to UV in their literature and independently verified...
http://www.coronadofilters.com/safety/halpha.htmThat, and the fact that the etalon and ER filter are front-mounted and extremely durable - unlike some other designs which put an ER out front, but require periodic replacement because the ER filter used significantly degrades over time. (OUCH!)
Yale makes an important point though, for anyone out there fascinated by the prospect of solar observing. If you are on a budget, the safest way to go is a
projected white light image. DO NOT attempt to cut corners on solar observing equipment and DO NOT assume a trusting attitude towards manufacturers and sellers of systems. It's not that the market is rife with dangerous systems - it isn't, really - but poorly made, damaged, or carelessly used solar observing gear can cost you your eyesight! NEVER use a solar filter that could fall or be knocked off a telescope, and NEVER use one which does not cover the aperture (the front end) of the telescope completely. Check any filter for defects personally - a pinhole in a cheap filter is a prescription for disaster, and even high quality filters are subject to damage and degradation over time. I advise emphatically to avoid used equipment. KNOW your gear!
If this is more than you want to deal with, go to spaceweather.com and you can see lots of superb solar images at multiple wavelengths - scroll to the bottom of the spaceweather home page and you'll see lots. I'm partial to the Big Bear Solar Observatory's "The Sun from Earth" page to get a quick look if I don't have time to set up my scope - or to check activity before heading off to show a bunch of school kids the sun in my equipment.
Astronuc, unfortunately, I've never been in position to catch a CME. Good thing SOHO does so well!
Jim