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InTheWakeOfStardust

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    Birmingham, UK

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  1. Neat bag! And thanks for the reply I've flown this imaging train (not the mount though) across the globe in a backpack similar to yours, and I'm super happy with it. but I do have to take the entire thing apart to get everything to fit (cameras disconnected, dovetails disconnected, guidescope and asiair disconnected, tube rings on OTA moved so the dew shield can be fully retracted etc). It's a bit of a faff to set back up again when I'm just roadtripping within the UK. My other telescope has a wooden box made especially for it, with its original shipping foam, but I change my rig around quite often so cutting foam out to match the shape of the whole rig is difficult. I love the child seat photo haha! I have definitely been guilty of throwing the sucker on the back seat of the car and just keeping it in place with the seat belt. As you say, probably not good for it at all, but I really didn't want to have to take it apart and put it back together again. I eventually got myself a padded bag for "small telescopes" from FLO - it's actually massive, easily fits my entire imaging rig plus plenty of accessories/another telescope (I think it's meant to fit a small tripod and mount as well). Added some bubble wrap for that extra but of protection and I'm roadtrip ready!
  2. Thank you! I went with a padded bag from First Light ultimately, but I have added some bubbles wrap for that extra protection.
  3. Sorry for the late reply! I totally forgot I'd posted, then logged in to a bunch of great advice 😄 This bag looks amazing! I do have something pretty much the same already tbh, for when I'm flying abroad and I take the rig apart to pack it up small enough to fit in hand luggage. I was mainly looking for a padded bag I can ferry around the UK in the car, which is big enough to keep my entire imaging train intact so I don't have to keep faffing around reconnecting everything when I hop from place to place (I enjoy roadtripping and stopping in different places each night; having to take everything apart and pht it back together every single night is a pain). I decided on an Oklop bag for "small refractors" - which is actually massive. Big massive. It's probably designed to take a small mount and tripod as well, so plenty of extra storage space, and my entire imaging train fits in there easily, with extra bubble wrap to be on the safe side.
  4. Thank you! I'll 100% check out that Oklop bag. It's mainly just for the imaging train, my CEM26 comes with a fab aluminium case and like you, I never worry about the tripod haha. I can't say I'll never bump them into anything (I have, sadly, dropped this imaging train on concrete before, luckily the only damage was an easily replaced dew shield/lens cap and some minor scratches). But the bag looks like exactly what I need!
  5. Hi all! I'm looking forward to taking my set up on holiday with me, but I have a question about how to pack everything up. I have a Zenithstar 73, with flattener, guide scope, guide cam, Canon 700D, Asiair Pro, and obviously dew heaters/filters etc. Before when I have travelled, I have taken everything apart and packed it all up individually in the boxes they were shipped in...but its a real pain having to disassemble and reassemble everything constantly. To get the refractor in its shipping case I have to remove the dovetail and carry handle, and change the position of the tube rings. It's easy enough to reassemble...but a pain if I am just heading a couple of hours up the road and back. So! I'm wondering if it's OK to travel with mmy imaging rig ready to use, and if so, if anyone has any case recommendations to keep it protected? Thanks!
  6. Purely out of interest, my field flattener has accumulated a bit of dust from who knows where. Its not bad enough at all for me to warrant cleaning it currently, but still. Can the same/similar techniques be used to clean that if the time comes?
  7. Thank you! I'll get my hands on one and see what I can do. I'm reluctant to actually touch it unless it's a last resort, but clearly it being covered in debris isn't good for it either. Hopefully I haven't ruined it too much, I can't afford a replacement right now.
  8. Hi all! I'm really new to this game, and I'm interested in imaging. I've started out in a bortle 8-9 area, so I invested in an L-eXtreme filter to try and help cut out a bit of the light pollution. Trouble is, I'm clumsy, and while trying to screw it onto my field flattner a couple of nights ago, I dropped it on a carpeted floor. I can't see any actual damage, but I can see a couple of tiny hairs stuck to the surface of the filter. Is there any way to clean a filter? I haven't had a chance to try and actually image with it after dropping it because the skies have been awful, but I'm terrified I've ruined it!
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