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John

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Posts posted by John

  1. 5 hours ago, garryblueboy said:

    Managed to find these two at a great price thanks to Zoltan at 365 although I like my black and green can’t justify the the Ethos price these days they have gone mad and I already have a couple plus a13mm Ethos picked at a reasonable secondhand price ....

     

     

    Very nice !

    There is really not much between these and the Ethos's. I'm sure you have seen the review that I did a while back:

    https://stargazerslounge.com/topic/236613-skywatcher-myriad-100-110-degree-apparent-field-eyepieces/

    I understand that optically the Myriad's, Lunt / APM XWA's,  Stellavue Optimus and TS XWA's are the same.

    • Like 3
  2. 9 minutes ago, Littleguy80 said:

    I thought it would be fun to find all the iterations of my eyepiece case on this thread. The first version for my first telescope, a SkyWatcher 130M on EQ2. There was even room for a red light torch in those days.
    613BC24D-6AA6-426D-9B90-D179BEB35B2B.jpeg.c2a9bdcd70e05a70431ae202aa839962.jpeg

    The arrival of a 10” dob led to the first major rework and a couple of 100 degree eyepieces. There was still room for the Telrad though. 
    B537563E-245B-47A0-AF36-3015FB0D1BDF.jpeg.4ecf3cf7ba21062bffca19bf7202c4b9.jpeg

    Things really took off after that. It became a world of widefields and orthos. A decidedly fuller case now!

    4F0A0C32-936C-4ED1-86FB-340499D4ED18.jpeg.fa565372cca3c209d4377e54e6fdc840.jpeg

    Finally my most recent rework. I don’t think there’ll be anymore major reworks but never say never! 
    AA020749-7994-47AF-88E3-DA65D3A6B208.thumb.jpeg.19fc72e37c28883cc992133366cb9121.jpeg

    Nice idea 😀

    Here are my early ones from the late 1980's: .956 inch fitting and all fitted into an old cigar box !;

    https://stargazerslounge.com/uploads/monthly_05_2010/post-12764-13387745157.jpg

    And then where I was 11 years ago: quite a step forward:

    https://stargazerslounge.com/uploads/monthly_01_2010/post-12764-133877420425.jpeg

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 7
  3. It's a great looking scope John :thumbright:

    I'm looking forward to hearing how it performs. There has been much posted on these scopes under different brandings over the past few years but little in the way of a balanced and comprehensive assessment.

    If the performance matches it's looks then the current purchase price looks a bargain :smiley:

     

     

  4. 2 inch eyepieces can show much larger true fields than 1.25 inch eyepieces of the same focal length.

    With the 72ED though I wonder if the 2 inch focuser is mainly aimed at imagers ?

    Baader likes to give lots of options for use with their gear. Generally these options work well but with the Hyperion 1.25 inch eyepieces removing the lower optic assembly leaves an optical set based on the Erfle eyepiece design which can work well with a slow scope (eg: F/10, F/12 etc) but struggle with edge correction in faster scopes, such as the ED72 at F/5.8.

    As you have the 8mm Hyperion, if you can get hold of a 2 inch diagonal, why not try it and see for yourself ?

     

  5. Sorry I distracted this thread with a picture of a bag of money.

    It was not mine - my astro budget is practically zero currently. Fortunately I don't actually need or want anything astro-wise just now though 😁

    Back (sort of) on topic, there are also refractors around that are termed "Super Achromat" just to add to the confusion:

    I don't think there is any agreed "industry standard" definition of these terms though, no matter how much they are debated on forums like this :rolleyes2:

    • Like 1
  6. I used to have the TV Gibraltar mount on the ash wood tripod, which I think is a bit heavier duty than the Tele Pod ?

    The Gibraltar was good with a 102mm F/6.5 refractor but was not anywhere near as happy with my 120mm F/7.5 refractor. It was pretty hopeless with a 127mm F/9.4 achromat on board I'm afraid.

    Normally I really like Tele Vue products but I found the Gibraltar mount I bit underwhelming really.

     

  7. Very interesting piece of equipment.

    I used to use one with a Leica ASPH zoom lens to get a wide range of powers, provided that I could remember the different spacer combinations !

    The optical element on the VIP is very high quality I think.

    Baader's modular approach to their products allows a lot of flexibility and opportunity for those who like to experiment :smiley:

     

    • Like 1
  8. I have a similar issue with a 90mm F/11.1 achromat that I purchased last year. It was very cheap and, having tried adjusting the tension and tilt of the focuser, the tilt of the objective, the positioning of the lens spacers and the seating of the lens elements I've had to accept that it was a low cost scope and I've probably got it as good as it is going to be. The star test is a bit out with the diffraction rings skewed a little and brighter on one side than the other. Using the cheshire to test the objective tilt (after getting the optical axis of the focuser properly in line with that of the objective with a laser) reveals two slightly overlapping disks but not that nice fully overlapping image that I would like to see.

    I've concluded that either the figure of the objective (or one of it's elements) is not that great (maybe some wedge ?) or that there is some inaccuracy in the build and fit of the (plastic) objective cell that I can't get to the bottom of.

    Every now and then over the past months I've got the thing out and had a play, re-seated the focuser and the objective, even had the objective out of the cell and checked the spacers, etc, etc but I just can't get any further with the thing :rolleyes2:

    I suspect my scope is from the same factory that made yours except mine has Celestron branding.

    The actual performance under the stars is not bad to be fair. It splits quite tight double stars, showed some nice detail on Mars during the opposition, a sharp lunar surface, good white light solar views etc. Not much CA at F/11.1 either. But that star test and the cheshire test niggles me.

    The pics below are not from my scope but are close to what I see. My cheshire images look like the right hand one and the star test of the scope at high power (200x) is somewhere between the two center ones below.

    I've kind of given up trying to get things better to be honest :dontknow:

    It's been quite fun playing around with it and it was cheap !

    fraccolli01.jpg.da03157db6be3c13c24218235ded3549.jpg

     

    fraccolli02.jpg.ef802fb647e3dd20f6069c04b8dbf26d.jpg

     

    So I will be interested in any suggestions as well :smiley:

     

     

    • Like 1
  9. Just now, Louis D said:

    I've often wondered why there are four beginners forums, but only one Scopes/Whole setups forum.  Why aren't scopes split out by type as on CN?  A refractors forum would have been the natural place for this thread, but it doesn't exit on SGL for unknown reasons.

    From when I was a moderator here I recall we did discuss this quite often but the conclusion was that we worried about "silos" developing as is the case to some extent on CN.

    Maybe that viewpoint has changed lately though ?

    I agree with the points that Carl has made in this thread re: high end equipment. This is now discussed a lot on SGL whereas there is (or seems to be ?) less emphasis on more accessible / affordable options, which in many cases enable just as much enjoyment to be had.

    I'm probably guilty of this as well so I'm going to try and do something about that in the way I post :embarassed:

     

    • Like 3
  10. 10 minutes ago, Kon said:

     

    Unless as you said earlier, the viewing was not great, and I got confused with what i saw? So maybe it was some atmospheric disturbance and to my untrained eye I confused it as two stars? I will need to revisit once the skies clear again

    You do need good seeing to make the split - it is a pretty tough challenge and not like a "regular" double star. The distance between the A & B stars is about the same as the gap between Rigel A & B as a guide but the brightness difference is much greater, hence the challenge.

    • Thanks 1
  11. 2 hours ago, Kon said:

    I should have described it a bit better....I managed to see two stars side by side with a bit of overlap between them so not sure if by definition this splitting (as i said i may have used the wrong term); Mizar and Alcor, I usually see two stars well separated, even last night.

    Actually, that does not sound like Sirius A & B to be honest with you :icon_scratch:

    This is what the pair look like with my 12 inch dobsonian at 265x:

    sirius180219.jpg.3fde21419800bb41324ad4e9e3f38a11.jpg

    Sirius B appears as a very faint glimmer of light that shines, often intermittently, through the halo of glare that surrounds Sirius A. Sirius A is 10,000 brighter than B.

     

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