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ian2

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Everything posted by ian2

  1. Foundation poured. This isn’t going very fast. The Mrs keeps finding other jobs for me to do.
  2. Unfortunately where I’m building used to be occupied by some large trees. I had hoped that the roots would have rotted away by now but no such luck. The worst one is exactly where the scope is going. At this point i’m not building a pier but I plan to install a foundation for one. After some effort I’ve managed to break off a chunk of root which will give me enough room for the pier base. The m base will be strip foundations around the edge and slab across the bottom. Hopefully most of the roots will come out.
  3. well spotted its 6.0mm . Going to a mcb in the house. My warm room will be more of an office and also house my ham radio gear.
  4. After some gardening and holidaying I’m back working on this project. I’ve ordered sub base, crete mix and cement for the foundation. Also some electrical parts. Armoured mains cable, consumer unit and some nice red LED bulkhead lights 5w. I have some spare sockets, light switches and back boxes lift over from previous work.
  5. As far as the composite cladding goes, wood is cheaper. I’ve looked at uPVC cladding too which is cheaper and might work. I will request some samples when I get to that stage.
  6. Thanks Alan. I was out yesterday evening making a start. The Mrs suggested that I start work on it and even offered to help. My plan is to try to finish the foundation before the frosts come. Foundation will be 450 deep trenches along the walls with a course or two of 100mm blocks. Then dig out the top soil from within the footprint of the building and put DPC over the whole area. I'll purchase some timber to prefab the frame in 3m sections in my workshop to be assembled outside. I don't have much free time and in winter would be limited to a few hours each weekend if I was building it on site. Building inside will let me do a bit in the evenings and once the sections are done I can prepare some timber for the roof, put up the walls, and cover it.
  7. Oh no, this is terrible. A parcel like that isn’t going to blow away and it’s a bit too specialised to be of interest to a thief. My guess is that someone working for that company dropped it or let something big fall on it and then got rid of the evidence rather than take the blame. 😞
  8. Back in the 1990s I build a 8ft diameter dome out of fiberglass panels. I spent ages cutting ribs from plywood with my old Black and Decker jigsaw. Much to my dismay it was destroyed by strong winds a few months after completing it. After than I abandoned the idea of having an observatory and went off and did other things. Fast forward to the present day and I use a 30cm Skywatcher flextube dob which sits in the hallway. I've been using it for two years and it is just about transportable but involves at least three trips back and forth and then it needs to cool down, then observing, and again another 3-4 trips carrying it back inside. Not to mention leveling and alignment. My first thoughts to facilitate an easier process of deploying the scope were to put it on a buggy and park the buggy inside a insulated cupboard in my shed (a large box profile garage) however I'd still have to wheel it out, level it, align and cool down a bit. Though I'm still out in the elements and if its not cloudy here, its usually windy, often enough to shake the scope. After browsing SGL over the last few weeks I've decided that the best option for me is to build an observatory. The dob mount places some constraints on my design as does the weather here in Aberdeenshire. I am very exposed in all directions and any observatory I build needs to be built to withstand 100mph winds. I would like a bigger scope at some point hence I will aim for a design that would fit something larger, or let me add a pier should I want to go for an equatorial mount at some point. Another requirement is a warm room. This will be insulated and lined in plasterboard for use as a home office and again perhaps some imaging if I get the urge to try that. From other builds on here with a combined warm room Ill be going down the same route as Gina and others, with a roof that slides over the top of the warm room. I will need walls a low as possible for the observing area while having decent height for the warm room. I will build a flap on the southern wall, and the roof will roll towards the north. Aberdeen is south east (bad skyglow), an industrial estate is about 600m east of me with some stupidly bright lighting towers pointing in my direction. If I lose some of the horizon in those directions this won't hurt and should reduce glare from the lighting towers. The photos below shows my horizons. I was picking up some wood from my timber supplier and he recommends going for larch cladding with a membrane behind it rather than T&G shiplap. This is a traditional Scottish technique with wide square boards with a narrow board on top covering the join to allow for expansion. The price of timber is shocking compared to the last time I was buying the stuff. My intention is to post my ideas as I work out the details and hopefully get some feedback as I go along. Clear skies
  9. How much would I need for a 300p Flextube?
  10. 12.5, then 7mm and 4mm Nirvanas. Somewhere on SGL i read that spacing should be worked out by dividing by 1.414 or thereabouts. I get 8.8mm but 9mm is close enough 😆 I bought a ES 24mm 68 deg and an OVL panaview 32mm to provide more options in the longer focal lengths which i tested out last night with no moon.
  11. ES 24mm 68 deg. This will fill a gap between 32mm and 16mm OVL Nirvana. I’m also building an observing chair. Got some more screws from delivered from Screwfix today, if that counts for this thread 🤪
  12. I’ve been out once (20th Aug) with my 12.5mm Morpheus since I got it. Scope is a 300p dob. I have 32mm omni and 16,7,4mm OVL nirvanas for comparison. Eye relief is better than the nirvanas, field seems flat with pinpoint stars across the field of view The moon was close to full which limited my choice of objects. Contrast seems very good, Jupiter was crisp and i was able to see the transit of Ganymede’s shadow at 120x. I don’t feel like replacing all my nirvanas with morphi but the 9mm would fit in between 12.5mm and 7mm… ☺️
  13. Here is my ebay flight case, with room for expansion. I left a wider than necessary gap between eyepieces in case I obtain physically bigger eyepieces in the future.😉
  14. 12.5mm morpheus, for use with my 300p dob🤗
  15. Baz Yeah that was me doing some Sunday night shopping. I will let you know how I get on with it. Will see how it compares to the Nirvanas cheers Ian
  16. After some deliberation and reading through this thread i’ve clicked the button on the 12.5mm Morpheus: for use in my SW 12” flextube dob. I have OVL nirvanas in 4, 7, and 16mm and. OMNI 32mm plossl. Next will be a ~24mm of some description. The 32mm is like looking through a toilet roll tube compared to the nirvanas.
  17. £6.99 is too expensive for what it is. I’ve also tried Astronomy Now and Astronomy however I find that browsing on here provides better info about observing than any of the magazines 😝 for the competitive price of free
  18. The included instructions aren’t very clear, what I found helped me was to leave the mirror cover on (i have a flextube) and put card on the tube wall opposite the focuser until i got the secondary sorted out, and to use a torch to illuminate and make the rings easier to see. For the last step i use a collimation cap to line up the centre hole with the mirror 🍩
  19. We had some friends over and once dark I set up my scope to show them a few objects. Jupiter, Saturn, M57 and M13. The kids (5 to 7) enjoyed seeing through the telescope once they learned not to touch it while looking into tge eyepiece. This was without letting the scope cool down, while changing eyepieces I was surprised to see the hot air swirling in the de focused mirror. Later on, I set up the scope with Skysafari and went for some more objects: the double cluster in Perseus, Pleiades, Cats Eye nebula, M13 again, failed to see the Veil nebula, and M31 on request of my friend although it’s still just a fuzzy blob. Aftee the scope had been outside 2 hours and friends left I tried mars again before packing up. By this time my secondary had misted up and .. wow! Much better results with Mars. I could now see the polar ice cap and make out features on the surface. After months of permacloud I am really enjoying getting some use out of this scope. Ian
  20. ian2

    Hi

    Buenas tardes y bienvenidos a SGL. !Saludos desde escocía! Ian
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