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DaveL59

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Posts posted by DaveL59

  1. ok bits arrived (also posted to the postman thread). The Joby phone holder seems good tho the note with case isn't too secure with the extra thickness but I do like the clamp method rather than a sprung system. Had those break before with the larger phones I run.

    image.png.6c6c216d28fad2de37ba89b09d48b07b.png

    image.png.9cba4a2c4bb27f7863f542107e511139.png

    Will be an easy swap between scopes, on the TAL100 there its screwed into the dovetail bar under the OTA since the tube rings aren't tapped with 1/4 tripod sockets where the bar itself is, handy. Just need to sort a means to mount this on the TAL-M and vintage 3-inch at some stage.

    • Like 1
  2. The long river smiley box boutique delivered a couple handy bits today.

    image.png.bf5dc4c38abd85dc8fed223ac872e4e6.png

    Joby phone holder, couple of dual tripod mount bars and a new battery for the old note-3 phone that now runs a note-7 ROM port. Can now easily mount the phone to the scopes and swap it around via the vixen bar or tube rings to have some smarts in scanning around the sky manually when not using the GoTo.

    image.png.66d85eef76ca11e05b98b93b1a2b0e3d.png

    image.png.66287dc5bb34afd9d3f26a81b98a2828.png

    image.png.cad1120056f8fada2e89e0b6d6bd5a48.png

    • Like 5
  3. to give an idea how much difference, I've taken a pic of a circle-V 12.5mm 0.965 EP next to a Vixen 10mm in an adaptor

    image.png.ab494c62661eb6074c64aa54105ffbea.png

    You'd probably be looking at lifting the mirror an inch or so above where it currently sits. Can be done, new longer screws for the mirror mount and suitable springs and then collimate. I've done this on a TAL-1 after switching the focuser out from the OEM 32mm to an OEM 1.25-inch and that works very well.

    • Like 2
  4. never tried on a newt but likely issue you'd have is the 1.25 to 0.965 adaptor will mean the modern eyepiece is further out than an original 0.965 one would sit, essentially like having the focuser racked out more. So you may find there isn't enough in-travel available to get focus with the modern eyepieces. You may be able to solve that by moving the primary mirror up the tube or replacing the focuser with a 1.25-inch one or a combination of both. 

    • Like 2
  5. How's the overall weight of the tripod, extender and mount Neil? 

    Am seriously thinking I should do the same and get the extender to keep some stability while still able to clear the fence, but I leave the rig assembled and hoik the assembled tripod and mount out to the garden as one, with just the OTA removed. Guess I could drop the weights off to make that easier if needs be.

  6. 2 hours ago, jonathan said:

    I'm curious about the UV cure - I have read on these forums a time of about 20 minutes, but is that direct sunlight shining through glass itself or is scattered UV sufficient, e.g. eyepiece laying on it's side?

    If working with lens elements or OTA glass or mirror surfaces etc I would recommend a bulb blower (with long plastic nozzle) to blast away dust and small particles etc, I could only find a medium-sized one which I bought from eBay, I wanted a much larger version (the bulb itself the size of my hand) but couldn't find where to buy one from.  I've seen advice not to use an air duster as this can spew out liquid propellant.

    hi Jonathan, ideally you'd not have the sun directly aiming into the lens as mentioned elsewhere. Risk of heat damage and of course potential to start a fire if the sun gets focused onto something thru the lens. Offset from the sun so that diffuse UV can flood the component should be fine. It will only kill fungus tho, not remove it, so while it will prevent spread you'd need to strip things down to clean the surfaces if you felt it worthwhile. HTH

    • Thanks 1
  7. So long as the sun isn't directly hitting the lens then you could be fine but 20 mins I'd reckon being a bit short. More usually for indirect solar you'd be looking at a few hours perhaps and even repeated on a few days. How frequent is hard to say, depends how much the gear has been exposed to the potential of spores and storage conditions. I more use a UV light than the sun, more reliable than the sun here and is convenient and less of a risk of starting a fire 🙂 

  8. 15 minutes ago, Gasconman said:

    But the whole point of it is that the phone has to be aimed at the sky, perpendicular to the OTA in both planes, otherwise the 'Push-To guidance' isn't going to work.
    If you use a decent phone holder, like that Manfrotto I'm using which has a pretty fierce spring and dimpled rubber grips, there's no way the phone is going to drop out.

    yeah I have on order a holder to use. Reason in part I made that remark is if you look at the celestron starsense explorer, using a mobile parallel to the OTA, tho that has plate-solving using the camera. Downside of the phone having to be perpendicular is its a bit like using a straight thru finder vs a RACI one, much more of a pain in the neck...

  9. managed to flash a ported Note-7 ROM onto my old Note-3 last night, so it now runs droid v6.01 and SkEye installs and runs. Will need to sort a suitable phone holder for it and then I can give this a go. Am thinking to use one of the Manfrotto 200PL plates to fix it on the tube ring, that way I can use the quick-release to swap between a couple of the scopes easily. Pity you have to aim it at the sky as if taking a pic rather than having the phone parallel to the OTA which would be easier when aiming high, not to mention less chance the phone might drop face down... 

  10. that's a lovely looking scope James, a real beauty!

    I expect the black is some sort of lacquer finish, tho if its shellac or something else I'd not be able to guess at. Probably hard to replicate these days but not impossible. The brass screws you may be able to obtain new replacements, tho they'll be imperial size. If desired the new brass can be aged to be a closer match to the existing ones.

    Have fun restoring it tho, and using it too of course 🙂 

  11. 2 hours ago, Rusted said:


    The flint is particularly prone to large, scalloped, surface flaking when your hand shakes.
    Or you lose patience with gravity as the lens clings desperately to its cell. It probably has far more sense than you do at this point!

     

    you mean something like this...
    image.png.0faa9567688e934074b1b0fabe005a22.png

    In this case tho the lens "cell" was quite different and just the small step between the inner and outer tubes securing the lens in place and that was enough for the lens to tilt as I was turning the dew shield outer section trying to overcome the glue that was securing the inner and outer sections together. A lesson tho for sure in how fragile the flint glass can be. Now this lens still performs very well after blacking over the spalled part. The rainbow area returned to "normal once out of the cell tho I'm aware it is a weakened area that could fail later on of course.

    The above lens is a glued 3-inch vintage doublet where the ED in question is 2 air-spaced lenses of course, so double the opportunity for a lens to decide to go its own way as you try to free it from its prison...

     

    • Sad 1
  12. If you've a bit of wood to fit that slot in the adapter you'll get away with not marking it too as well as add leverage 🙂 

    Just saw your reply to me as I edit this one. Yeah I get what you mean, option then is get another adaptor, perhaps. You wouldn't lose the AZ-GTI ability to work if the mount is refitted to the adapter, but does sound like it'd be a pain each time you want to swap things around if it gets stuck like this. Has to be tight enough tho so it doesn't come loose in use but then it's hard to remove later.

     

  13. I've sometimes found on the TAL-M that the knuckle under the L-shaped ALT-AZ is hard to undo, with the AZ axle just rotating even with the clutch tight. Similar to what I'm guessing is under that adaptor. You perhaps will cringe but try slacken the clutch and turn the RA axle a bit then retighten, then a light tap on the adaptor with a hammer in the undo direction may be enough to overcome the resistance and shock the thread to start to turn. Once it does it'll undo ok. Don't overdo the pounding tho or you may create a flat spot in the bearings.

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