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Graeme

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Everything posted by Graeme

  1. Well it's 300mm x 300mm x 75mm and weighs 5kg. Royal Mail want £4.35 for the postage. Let me know if you want it and I'll PM you.
  2. Thanks Peter, it's going a bit slow in this cold weather! But I'm enjoying the build. Dunno the price of postage, together they were £5.88 for the pair. I'll weigh the spare one and find out.
  3. The brake disc arrived. Big thanks to my neighbour Tony for his drill stand! Three M16 threaded rod lengths fitted and ready to drop into the concrete in the pier. £90 for the Baader mount adapter, £2 for the brake disc from ebay! They come in pairs, so if anyone needs a brake disc, the other one is going for the price of the postage!
  4. Moving on slowly! Excavations done. Shuttering done for the pier, The pipe is just to check the rebar for size, the actual pipe will be 1100mm tall. I'll be picking up the shuttering timber for the trench for the concrete under the side next to the fence on the way home from work tomorrow. Then all the concrete can be poured in one go.
  5. Coincidentally, I watched this video recently by the very excellent Cuiv. He doesn't answer the OP question with specific dB figures directly but he does discuss signal to noise ratio in detail. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgnH2WGTwBs Regards Graeme
  6. Good luck with the concrete pour tomorrow. I've been putting mine off till the weather warms a bit, partly for the concrete but partly for me!
  7. Our Civil Works lads put a chamfer on the edge of their concrete plinths by using a chamfer strip fixed to the top of shuttering prior to the concrete pour. How to Make Chamfered Edge in Concrete - The Constructor HTH Regards Graeme
  8. Same as that! I got the time of the Sun on the meridian at my location from Timeanddate.com
  9. 600mm cube. It seems to be the going rate. Your excvation looks massive! Is it finished?
  10. Ground levelled some more. Redundant brickwork removed and old tree stump dug out. There was only 8" of that thing sticking out of the ground, I didn't realise it was so big! Had to pull it with a ratchet strap looped around the concrete fence post. The hose pipe feeds a tap at the end of the garden, It might be wise to take that out! Rebar sections assembled, if the rain holds off tomorrow I'm hoping to get the shuttering finished. Then I just need the brake disk delivered and we will be ready for the concrete pour. Thought I might work out the pier height again before I cut the pipe and pour the concrete, that needs to be right!
  11. That's a very neat pier adapter plate. Mine is a Baader mount adapter on top of an Ebay brake disc!
  12. Thanks Swoop1 Your pier base thread excavation tidiness was one of my inspirations! My excavation is not quite so tidy now, I left the fence post spike so as to not disturb the ground too much. But I've pulled it out now because it was in the way of the shuttering.
  13. Cheers Adyj1 I'm looking forward to it!
  14. It's a massive pain and I only tend to set up when there's a definite clear skies all night so the partials get missed. And my maximum exposure has only ever been 3 hours, so looking forward to multi-night captures of the same target.
  15. Every imaging session starts with me carrying my CGX mount and tripod out of the garage, putting on the counterweights, fixing the telescope onto the mount, laying out the 12 volt and USB cables and connecting everything together. This takes at least 40 minutes and at the end of the session, in the early hours of the morning, everything has to be disconnected, dismantled and put away. The time is coming and it's probably not that far away when I will need to separate the mount from the tripod in order to lift them! We have all heard this story before! So it's time for me to build a permanent setup. After a lot of research I have decided to build a back garden Roll off Roof Observatory. I've been off work for a few months so I've had time to read lots of roll off roof forum threads and think about a design. The initial plan was to build on this patio and use my CGX mount tripod. But then a concrete pier seemed like a good idea. So the adjacent border was cleared and the location moved to include a good place to dig a 600mm x 600mm x 600mm hole in the ground for the pier base. The first half of the dig was quite easy. The second 300mm was heavy clay. Next step, rebar and shuttering! Regards Graeme
  16. That's excellent David. Regards Graeme
  17. I bought a Baader CGX Mount Flange to go on top of my concrete pier (still in design stage (I'll start a DIY observatory build thread soon!)) The flange has an indent on the underside with two holes in it. Anyone know what it's for? Cheers Graeme
  18. Well that's incentive enough to start an observatory build! This has been a great thread to follow. Thanks Regards Graeme
  19. I've just installed CPWI Version 2.4.3 Beta 7 and connected my CGX to it. There are two major updates: The hand controller is no longer required for connection, you can plug the USB2 directly into the mount and the ASCOM drivers load no problem. I connected my CPWI focuser USB to my ASI camera hub USB. NINA seemed happy with the change. Also, "Bug fix: ASCOM driver will now deliver the mount to the previously specified park position before parking the mount." The Set as Park now remembers the Alt Az coordinates allowing a Park location to be used. The old version ASCOM driver didn't differentiate between Home and Park. Very useful for wall mounted flat frame light panels and ROR observatories! Please ignore if this is old news, it's new to me! Regards Graeme
  20. Thanks Martin. I try not to be too heavy handed! But the bloated stars need sorting. I didn't use Starnet because when whilst it works well on the smaller stars when I've used it previously, the well bloated stars remain unaffected. I might have another session on it with shorter exposures. Graeme
  21. Here's my go at NGC 6960 - The Western Veil Nebula, Caldwell 34, the Witches Broom Nebula. Part of the Veil Complex supernova remnant in the constellation Cygnus. Captured 21/08/22. 24 from 27 x 240 second exposures. Captured with NINA. Processed with PixInsight. It needs a bit more processing to darken the background and bring out the colours more. But there's too much wrong with it to spend more time on it! 52 Cyg, is oversaturated (showing a slight collimation adjustment is needed) so I need to have another go with more data at a lower exposure. The poor composition is a result of expecting more nebulosity in the top left of the image and the shadow of the guiding mirror shows at the bottom of the image! Regards Graeme
  22. Screwfix do a good range of fixed castors. My ROR is still in the design stage/wishful thinking stage/reading all the ROR threads stage. I'm still undecided on either rubber wheels on flat angle iron for quietness or metal V wheels on inverted angle iron for longevity. Do metal wheels make much noise? Regards Graeme
  23. The paint started flaking on the inside of my Celestron 9.25SCT whilst it was still under guarantee. The supplier sent it to the UK Celestron agent and he said it was my fault for using chemicals to clean it!!! I hadn't, a shocking abrogation of responsibility. Very disappointing. Celestron said they had never heard of it happening before. Interesting that you have the same thing happening Iapa! Thanks for the Protostar Flockboard tip John. I'll look into it. Regards Graeme
  24. Thanks Gabrielle. I'm quite pleased the OAG appears to have sorted out my misshaped stars problem. Regards Graeme
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