Jump to content

NLCbanner2024.jpg.2478be509670e60c2d6efd04834b8b47.jpg

Saganite

Members
  • Posts

    3,627
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    10

Posts posted by Saganite

  1. 20 hours ago, mikeDnight said:

     When I attend events such as PAS, I like to people watch. There you'll see brave and apparently fearless men walking proudly through the crowds of enthusiasts, with everyone's eyes following them as they carry an expensive scope they've just bought, out of the building. And you can hear, almost audibly, everyone's thoughts saying - "He's in bother when he gets home!" 

    This is why every astronomer should build or buy an observatory. They are great places to hide things!

    download.jpeg.77829b778574c117a3d7084591673c54.jpeg

    Not so Mike, at least not for me.

    When I put the recently arrived Lyra Optic into my dome, replacing the Vixen ED103, both beautiful white tubes, my wife entered to see what I was 'fiddling around with ' and it took about 30 seconds before she said, looking at the dew shield, " Lyra Optic, when did that arrive and where is the Vixen"

    I have not parted with the Vixen I hasten to add.

    • Like 3
  2. How long have got Mike ?

    I have had it for two and half years and not yet run out of superlatives.  It is a magnificent Alt Az mount, fitted with motors and controlled from my mobile phone, I can do what Iike with it.   Last night I pointed it South, made sure the scope was level, switched on the motors, selected Jupiter as my first alignment target, followed by Betelgeuse as my second, less than 90 seconds.  I went back to Jupiter and started observing. Within 15 minutes or so , out came the clouds so I went in sat by the fire and returned over an hour later to find a beautiful dark clear sky, seeing was Pickering 6 at least.  Jupiter was still in the FOV, so I carried on observing until about midnight. The GOTO is great, but if I want to just swing the scope around the sky looking at this and that, and occasionally banging my head on the scope and knocking it away, I only have to look at my phone stab my finger onto a target and it is there.  I may yet change a scope or two in what remains of my life but I will not need a change of mount.  The Rowan boys Dave and Derek should have produced this mount decades ago !

    I have in the last 6 months purchased two plates from them . Both just attach to the mount with the dovetail saddles then attached to them and one adjusts in a Y axis so that the total weight of both scopes is so balanced they will rotate 360 degrees and stay in any position with an adjustable weight to compensate for a single eyepiece or a fully laden bino. The  other plate on the other side of the mount adjusts so that both scopes point precisely at the same object. 

    I now have observing Nirvana.

    Quite happy to bore you with more about this when we meet at PAS in March if you would like me to Mike....:smiley:

     

    • Like 9
    • Thanks 2
  3. 1 minute ago, John said:

    I didn't use zoom eyepieces for quite a few years but now I find them in my focuser very often even though I have a case full of excellent fixed focal length eyepieces.

    I think todays zoom eyepieces have reached a level where their optical performance is close enough to fixed focal length units that the facility to almost instantly change the magnification is often enough to pursuade the observer to just "carry on zooming" rather than to change to a fixed focal length in the hope of a very modest enhancement of the view.

     

    That is exactly what I have found , in the main.  I too had a love hate relationship with zooms over the past few years and tried quite few of them.  The only one that stuck initially was the little Carton  7mm -21mm bought from Dave (F15 ) I really like that one, small and very good.  I have had the APM 7.7mm- 15.4 zoom with constant 67 deg for about a year and it is a keeper.  The other zoom is the much talked about Svbony 3-8 and this one I have used for 6 months so far and cannot fault it, using my eyes you understand, but levity aside I do think it  very good.  I now have just two short focal length eyepieces, 3.5mm which I will keep and 5mm which is on its way out....hopefully..:smiley:

    • Like 3
  4. An excellent session and a fitting farewell to Trinity, Dave. 

    I felt sad when I parted with my beloved Andromeda, a scope you also knew so well, but it was the right thing to do as it now is for you.  You will love your new scope and enjoy a new chapter , as am I.  All that matters is that we keep looking up.

    Somebody famous said that , not I....:happy72:

    • Like 3
    • Thanks 1
  5. I recently acquired a lovely Lyra Optics 102 f11 and during last evenings observations I had first light with it.  Following the E&F  star sightings I had intended to close up but It was niggling me that it was not aligned with the APM.  My Vixen ED103 had been on the other side of the AZ up until last night, in perfect alignment, and I suppose it was a bit naive to expect the f11 to do the same.  It took a further hour of adjusting to achieve this and having done so I had to  have 'First light '.

    I chose  of course the Trap and was rewarded with E&F, tiny and pin sharp. A star test on Betelgeuse revealed  near identical rings inside and outside of focus. A look at Jupiter was very sharp and neat, much smaller than I had been seeing all evening through the 6"  but still very pleasing, with the merest hint of purple around the planets limb.  Sigma Orionis revealed 4 stars, , pin sharp, Tegmine  a delight and Uranus very small but sharp and pale blue completed the little scopes foray into the night sky , in my hands at least.  I don't really know why I felt the desire for this scope having the 6" and the 4" Vixen mounted together for the last year or so. I had explained to Dave ( F15) that it was an itch  that needed scratching but it is a bit more than that.  Modest in aperture but long in tube, it just looks beautiful and performs very well, and I just wanted it .  Almost eighteen months ago I culled the herd from six  telescopes to three and felt better but now I am back to five, four of them refractors, and don't feel any worse. There is no hope.

    • Like 6
    • Haha 2
  6. The shadow of Io has now appeared and it is nice to see both Moon and shadow on the disc of the planet. Whilst waiting I have had a quick tour and checked out several star clusters, M41, M46,M47, M48 and M50.  Splits of Mintaka and Rigel were so clear and sharp, so the seeing is good perhaps 6 Pickering. 

    • Like 11
  7. After an enforced  break of an hour thanks to cloud cover the sky is now clear. Io is clearly visible just off centre on the NEB with bino and 18mm BGO pair, 167x.  The transparency has also improved.  This should hold until midnight at least if the forecast is correct.

    • Like 10
  8. I am too old now to consider a 16" Dob but I still have a 12" .  I also have my APM ED 152 and I much prefer using the big frac for everything, deep sky included, so much so that I will probably dispose of the Dob before too long.

    • Like 2
  9. I have always had a foot in both camps, in fact my very first scope was a  homemade 6" reflector which gave me my first view of Saturn, and a very very special evening was that, but I too fell for the beauty of a refractor  as early as I can remember, in the 1960's, but my parents could not afford one and until the advent of Chinese refractors, neither could I.  Nothing beats the sharpness of a refractor, as Mike says,  and nothing compares to the beauty of one, particularly a long focus one......of 5" aperture.....in white...:smiley:

    • Like 10
  10. 6 minutes ago, RobertI said:

    Sounds like the right decision for you Dave in your circumstances, really sorry about your eye problems.  ☹️ Sounds like you are working round your issue though.

    I have to say, the picture of @Saganite holding the scope made me laugh - he has a look that says “this is my scope now!” 😂 

    If only...

    • Like 1
    • Haha 2
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue. By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.