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Highburymark

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Everything posted by Highburymark

  1. Maybe: “Pointless, overpriced eyepieces announced - nothing of interest here (apart from lack of undercuts)” would have been better?
  2. My first reaction wasn’t so much a problem with the AFOV - people buy Plossls and abbés at all focal lengths and don’t moan about the narrow view. My concern was that it sounds as if only half of that fov will be sharp in faster scopes. If so, it will be a very specialist eyepiece. But it will be interesting if they can deliver on-axis benefits over the LE and abbé ranges. The Pentax XO is a plossl-type design, and they succeeded in making an EP with clear, on axis improvements over other eyepieces. The Starbase ‘orthos’ are actually Plossls, so the new range should be a step up from those.
  3. There’s a CN thread about them. The link is to Starbase’s website rather than Tak’s apparently.
  4. Just announced on Tak’s Japanese website, new range of TPL eyepieces. 12.5mm, 18mm and 25mm. Four elements, two groups. Replace the abbés and the LEs. Around £175?? I can’t copy the link. Maybe someone else can?
  5. I use the 2.6x most - in fact it’s necessary for me to reach focus with my binoviewers for solar Ha. As you may know the 1.7x is actually only 1.5x, so the 2.6x is very useful if you have nice low power eyepieces that you want to use at higher mags…… or if you need a more powerful barlow element to reach focus. It’s very sharp - although all GPCs are in my experience.
  6. Think you’re spot on with your solar strategy. Starting small and working up. The 115 will only be usable in excellent seeing. But it will be awesome - particularly on proms - when the time comes. Maybe keep an eye out for a cheap pair of 40mm plossls?
  7. Anyway, rant over. Back to the more interesting stuff - have you used your Quark with the 115?
  8. Thanks Tim -that’s impressive. Why aren’t telescope manufacturers all over their retailers’ promotional material? I overlooked this scope when I was upgrading last time because I thought it was almost as heavy as a TSA-120 triplet. It’s not just Vixen with this problem. There was also contrasting information about the TSA when I was researching it. It’s not as if manufacturers have a huge dealer network and a sprawling product range. A top class FPL53 115mm apo at well under 5kg is something I’d want to shout about. Who knows, it might be my next scope now I know how light it is.
  9. Hi Tim - do you know the weight of your basic OTA? The advertised information on retailers’ websites tends to fall between 4.4kg and 6.2kg, but I’ve seen various other weight claims for the 115. Not specific to Vixen - it’s an industry-wide problem in my experience. Stunning set up by the way.
  10. Yes - totally agree. If 4.7kg is accurate this scope is a real breakthrough for those of us who count weight as one of the key features in choosing a refractor.
  11. You’d have to lose the focuser too unfortunately. 22” is the maximum bag size on most airlines, which means the scope needs to be around 19” or less. Weight is rarely a problem - it’s dimensions that prove difficult. Lovely scope to take abroad though if the Moonlite’s easily removable?
  12. I can only comment on solar Ha really, as I’ve only directly compared the two types through a solar scope - I’d always slightly favour TV Plossls here. Delites are excellent in a binoviewer, as good as any complex eyepiece, and frankly often as good as orthos and Plossls. But the Nagler 13s have surprised me - I actually slightly preferred them to Morpheus 12.5s, but all these choices are very close in quality. It’s just a nice option to have a pair of widefields for the MBII - or any other of the BVs with wider prisms that have recently been launched.
  13. Looking too far off axis causes blackouts Stu, but I find there’s a natural compromise where I can scan around a medium wide field and certainly appreciate the ‘majesty’ factor beyond that. The Naglers work really nicely for solar Ha too - seeing the full solar disc at 120x creeping into view is pretty awesome. I still use orthos and Plossls 90% of the time - particularly for sharpest study of solar features. But it’s only a few years since the only widefield BVs on the market were £1k-plus. The MBIIs changed that so it’s nice to have some eyepieces that can take advantage of what they offer.
  14. I think this was the solution I read about on Solarchat too. But it was several years ago.
  15. It depends what your targets are, but the main selling point of the Maxbright II is wider views, so it’s nice to have at least one pair of eyepieces that exploits this feature. I love TV Plossls and microscope ‘orthos’ in my binoviewers on solar system objects, but I’ve recently been enjoying some Nagler 13s on the Moon and Sun. Seeing the Moon at 180x with 82 degrees of AFOV is wonderful.
  16. I hoped that the Lunt anti reflection filter would largely fix the problem, but it appears not. Your best bet is to ask the same question on Solarchat, where there are a number of member who have had the same issue. Haven’t seen it covered on SGL. It was the glow that put me off the LS80DS - otherwise such a fine scope. But I’m sure Solarchat will help you.
  17. I remember expert predictions just three or four years ago that we might be entering a new Maunder Minimum - 75 years of inactivity as experienced in the 17th century.
  18. That’s fair. Both the pressure tuned scopes I had only came on band at the end of the piston travel, so required quite a lot of force - and that can be an issue with light mounts. But otherwise they were fine.
  19. There’s no reason to avoid pressure tuning. In general the system works very well. There are some cases where the internal o-rings have needed replacing, but out of thousands of pressure tuned scopes out there, it’s a pretty robust system - definitely should not put you off buying a particular model.
  20. After 25 years of starhopping, going to give push-to a try. Celestron Starsense Explorer unit repurposed for a typical Synta finder mount. Thanks to the much missed JohninDerby for the original inspiration, and others on the forum for help sourcing the bits.
  21. Bizarrely, the More Blue rings even seem to work with the turbobanana.
  22. For the FS-128 I think I’d have done the same Stu. More of a classic look.
  23. If it’s 6kg this looks like a very nice telescope for a highly competitive price. Optical reports have been very good from what I’ve seen. FCD100 according to those sources. Also nice to see another visual scope from the FLO stable, although I’m sure it’s a nice imaging instrument too.
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