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DaveL59

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Posts posted by DaveL59

  1. 14 minutes ago, Jennifere20 said:

    Haha. Forensic science :)

    an interesting field, lot of demand for it too I expect :) 

    re more expensive bits, you might be better with an RDF or telrad which is the more highly regarded of the two.

    When you're happy you know your way around the scope and eyepieces a good upgrade would be better eyepieces and barlow. The BST starguiders are oft recommended here as a step up. The barlow in your pic is pretty poor to be honest so a Celestron Omni or similar would be much better. But best to get familiar with what you have and then decide if its a hobby you'd like to stick with before sinking too much into it or it quickly becomes a money pit chasing more aperture etc ;) 

  2. 2 minutes ago, Jennifere20 said:

    Who’s jennifer Eccles? Ha. Nope. E is my surname. 

    ah just a song that used to play on the radio in the school coach when I used to live up your way, along with the locomotion and several others. A long time ago now lol.

    For setting up the mount, this may help
    http://www.astro-baby.com/astrobaby/help/simple-polar-alignment/

    For the EQ2 we don't have a polar scope to get real accuracy but a good near approximate does make things easier in use :) 

  3. 9 minutes ago, Jennifere20 said:

    Will not having my scope set to north affect my viewing objects? Because I don’t understand it how you set it to north and then move the telescope around to find things? 

    When you set up the EQ mount, you set the angle of the RA axis to match your longitude which I guess is 53.3 . That sets the rotation of the scope to match the way the objects will revolve around the sky for your location, relative to north (well, polaris). So for the mount to be most effective you want the RA axis pointing up toward north, for the EQ2 type mount a compass would get you approximately right. Now when you've locked onto your target, you should only need to adjust the RA sloMo to keep it in view.

    • Like 1
  4. Ah they do work, just the way it fits on my skywatcher EQ2 its the wrong side of the big gear wheel so needs to run the opposite way. Once on you'll figure out if you need to set N or S as it'll be obvious pretty quickly once the target stays in view or drifts off to the side in the eyepiece. Once you get the hang of getting the mount pointing to N and level they do make for a more relaxed viewing of a target as you don't have to be adjusting the RA to keep things in view.

     

  5. I use this site on teh PC which you can set date and time and it'll show you what would be up to look at

    https://in-the-sky.org/skymap.php

    At the moment Jupiter and Saturn would be rising early hours, like 2AM and be quite low in the sky and quickly overtaken by the dawn tho you should still be able to view if you can track them. You have a RA motor for your mount I think you said, which would help once you've got the object in view and the RA axis pointed north.

  6. 1 minute ago, jiberjaber said:

    Yep thats my plan, I have asked a mate who runs a CCTV company if he had any spare but I just missed him chucking some out last week! Never mind. :) 

     

    doh, always the way huh. Don't go for a smoked dome though, but then you can always get a clear replacement which is what I did.

    If it helps this is what I did with my cheapo build

     

    • Like 1
  7. 46 minutes ago, Pete6 said:

    I used a 5 quid dummy camera case and it distorted the optics summat rotten.  However the images are fine. 

    My first test with a cctv module I used one of those, but since repurposed a dud dome PTZ that I got for a few quid off the bay and adapted to run upside down (dome up). So long as you can get a good seal (thats the tricky bit) it works fine and gives a clear view with no distortion.

  8. I'd like to hope it isn't broken, how far is the focuser racked in, do you get to the point in the focus where Venus shows as a sharply defined crescent that's quite thin especially at the tips?

    My images are a little out of focus for the camera so bloat a little, not to mention its a very bright object against a dark background. 

    Are you able to take a pic to show what you're seeing?
    Not easy but phone against the eyepiece might just do it. Ideally you need the camera focus to infinity and manual settings mode (pro mode on mine) or try the FV-5 lite app. We'll have more of an idea of we can see what you do :) 

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