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Ruud

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Everything posted by Ruud

  1. Yes, everything has to go back exactly the way it was. I saw a youtube video on servicing an SCT and there were thin cork shims, for instance, that had to go back in exactly the same spots. I looked again at the pictures. I think that on the inside of the secondary there are still traces of the glue that came loose. You'll need to find the right glue too. Look for an expert website. There's one for Celestron SE telescopes so I imagine there will be one or two for the ETX. Also check on Cloudy Nights.
  2. Yes, the baffle of the secondary. The secondary itself is the silvered spot. There might be a base for the baffle still glued to the corrector plate, and the baffle might have unscrewed itself from that, or the baffle was glued directly to the corrector plate. This is a tricky problem! If you open the telescope you could in principle glue the baffle back in place, or screw it back on, but then you'd have to reassemble the telescope well enough so that it can still be collimated. That's the tricky bit. You need to find a dedicated Meade ETX website, maybe some youtube videos of people servicing their ETX.
  3. Ruud

    IC 63 Composite

    Its really beautiful!
  4. Hi Mark, thank you for a most interesting post! I downloaded the excellent .tif and tried the method you suggest in Photoshop. My result was pretty close to what you achieved - almost as good. It was quite a bit of work, though, so I thought I'd suggest a method for when you want a quick result: use Topaz Adjust. Here you see a screenshot of the 'raw' tif opened in Adjust with some adaptive exposure and adaptive saturation applied. The small window is the original, the large one is the preview of the result. Just move the sliders around till you're happy. It takes a minute or two. Topaz Adjust runs in any program that can handle photoshop filters, like the freeware IrfanView for instance.
  5. Ruud

    Moon 30/08/17

    Nice Moon. Very small, but you've captured the essence of the thing.
  6. Congratulations, a field of 200 m at 1 km is something like 11.4°. That is wonderfully wide! Low power binoculars have interesting properties for amateur astronomers. Their bright and wide fields make them excellent for rich field observing. And of course, low power means you won't need a tripod to get shake free views. I have experience with 4x22, 17° field binoculars. Their exit pupil is 5.5 mm (22 divided by 4), which makes them bright enough to make targets like the Orion Nebula or the Andromeda galaxy stand out well. They offer impressive views of the constellations, and the the Milky Way is remarkable in them. Low power ensures that individual eyepiece focussing is hardly an inconvenience. Lower magnification comes with a greater the depth of field, which actually is a great benefits for nature observers. Unless your target is really nearby, it will look sharp, like everything else all the way to the horizon. Especially young children, whose eyes can accommodate over many diopters, will rarely need to adjust the focus of a low power pair of binoculars. My 4x22 Kasai seem to have the same eyepieces as yours. Mine are from an inexpensive line made by Kunming United Optics. I guess your 6x30s come from the same factory. Enjoy them!
  7. Okay. Ten points, out of ten.
  8. This is an interesting phase. I wonder: before you reassemble everything you probably want to blow any dust out. Do you suppose using a bulb blower (like the Giotto Rocket Blower) would be safe for the mirror coatings? Good luck with the rest of the project and thank you for documenting it so well.
  9. Altogether it is an amazing idea and the concept is proven. Congratulations!
  10. I do hope it works as planned!
  11. Hi, I made them in Geogebra. It's a freeware tool used in maths education.
  12. 32 mm Plössls have a long eye relief and may take some time to get used to, especially when the exit pupil is close in size to the user's pupil. Kidney beaning, however, should not happen with TeleVue or any other Plössls as they tend to have well behaved exit pupils. (Kidney beaning comes from spherical aberration of the exit pupil. Until the first generation Naglers this was a rare phenomenon.) Could it be blackouts that you're seeing? I have a 32mm GSO Plössl. Had some blackouts at first, but got used to the eyepiece, and the blackouts disappeared. I think you too may get used to your 32mm Plössl. Here is how blackouts occur. With long eye relief, steady eye placement becomes difficult. The movements of the eye cause blackouts in which the image disappears from one side to the other. When the image is partially illuminated, it is as if a curtain is drawn over one side of the image Here is how kidney beans occur With kidney beaning a kidney shaped shadow forms between the centre and the edge of the field, while both centre and edge remain fully illuminated. Kidney beans arise from even subtle eye movements, especially with larger exit pupils. When the eye movements get larger, blackouts will also occur. Below, a kidney bean occurs as one of the red rays can not enter the eye, yet the more extreme off-centre green ray still can. (The brain inverts what's on the retina, hence the shadow appears below the centre.) Fortunately, spherical aberration of the exit pupil is, to a large extent, a thing of the past.
  13. Wow, John, that is a beautiful telescope!
  14. I love Stuart Gary. He is an outstanding science journalist. He clearly specialises in astronomy and often the guests on his show, professional astronomers, mistake him for a colleague. I've been listening to him for many years. I was very distraught when the ABC cancelled Starstuff, his radio show, which had been Australia's highest rated science show for many years. The show was sacrificed to 'horizontal programming'. Fortunately many people emailed the ABC asking them to reconsider, which led them to continue with Starstuff as a podcast only. The show was also broadcast on radio in the USA. Stuart did the research, production and presentation, the ABC lent him their facilities to make the show. End 2015 the podcast was discontinued because the ABC had stopped supporting it. Again, a great number of people emailed them to let now how much they regretted this. This time Stuart decided to continue with the podcast by himself. The ABC would not let him use the name Starstuff (even though the term was coined by Sagan), so Stuart chose a new name for the podcast: SpaceTime. I listen to every episode of SpaceTime using iTunes. That's two episodes per week!! SpaceTime, like Starstuff before it, is the best astsronomy podcast out there. I also enjoy the Jodcast, an astronomy podcast made by students of Manchester University, and the Weekly Space Hangout by Fraser Cain on YouTube.
  15. Looks good. Congrats.
  16. Ruud

    SHO-Crescent-final.png

    Good image & Nice colour scheme!
  17. The video shows the problem well and your accent is very intelligible. I think Brian is right. Good luck, and be careful as Brian says.
  18. It looks great, Jim. I believe you when you say those legs are solid as concrete! I'm curious. How do you put the scope on top?
  19. It certainly looks solid. I hope it works well. One of the advantages of this adaptation is that you will be able to use a proper star diagonal. I think that the erecting prism in the C70 may be this little telescope's weakest link. I'll cross my fingers for that functionality you don't want to lose!
  20. I have this little scope. I use it with a 32mm GSO Plössl and for a finder I use the tube of a pen, like this: Thanks for the thread. I'll bookmark it!
  21. Many thanks, Martin, the atlas is huge. Enormous. Overwhelming!
  22. I really like this tip by L8-Nite: http://stargazerslounge.com/topic/254918-custom-made-eyepiece-case/#entry2781119 It teaches how you can use empty spray cans to make holes of the right size in foam. Wonderful, simple and effective! I suppose you have to make sure that the cans are really empty before you do this. Thanks to everyone who shows their eyepiece cases here. I visit regularly to have a look at them. Wouldn't want to miss any!
  23. a few more wheels on it and you'd think it is a locomotive. What a thing!
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