Many prominences visible today along most of the solar limb. Also much surface detail as seen in the PST. God Bless the man who designed the PST. It saved me from having to cobble-together a homemade coronascope of questionable safety, despite the decades-old S&T articles, lol. Yes, I managed to accumulate all the materials over the years, and still may build it one day for no other reason than at my age, it sounds mildly dangerous and beats blowing-up model airplanes with fire-crackers. Just barely. Ant-hills, on the other hand... ;-) In the white light scope, the sunspot group on the surface of the solar disk is even more impressive. S&T says it's visible to the (protected) naked-eye, but in Baader visual film the solar disk is still much too bright at 0X to see anything that small against the glare. Take their advice and use a dark welder's filter of the proper grade, #13 or #14. You could also try visual Baader material along with a ND filter (an eyepiece moon filter of 13% transmission should do the trick) and see if you can spot the big group without magnification.