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josefk

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Posts posted by josefk

  1. 13 hours ago, SwiMatt said:

    Thank you @josefk and @Ceramus! I love how rich in texture and contrast pastels are, not only for astro. Recently I tried to work more with pencils (easier to bring on the field), but I keep coming back to the beauty of this medium. 

    i have "field pastels" and "desk pastels" here - the field pastels can get a bit soggy/sticky in damp autumn/spring nights. I also put mine on  a heater some mornings to dry them back out 💧💧💧

    • Like 1
  2. It pains me to break this lovely pairing up (Tak clamp directly bolted to the mount) but needs must as i want the flexibility to mix and match new dual mounted combo's on the AZ100.

    Before (nice and neat, elegant even and totally secure):

    IMG_5219.jpeg.20c316fe162a414e8435efdba99e263a.jpeg

    After - HD Losmandy for Tak clamps:

    IMG_5220.jpeg.fd8e87fe31ee040e8f5323918fd06dbe.jpeg

    I guess the product manager at ADM follows the "value based pricing" school of thought rather than "cost plus". ahem. 😞 

    Splitting the Tak clamp off the mount above (as much as it pains me to do so) allows me to use a second saddle there to mount different scopes on the left and therefore indirectly now enables this new set-up on the right hand side of the mount so i can use my FSQ as a super finder for my ACF if i ever get outside with that scope...

    IMG_5221.jpeg.3779aaf8acf27c569de0c3828d01a128.jpeg

     

    • Like 6
    • Haha 1
  3. 16 hours ago, Ratlet said:

    Looking to get practice in for soldering (for building an autofocusser and EQ platform) I've been ordering DIY kits from eBay.  I've been looking them over and Been cherry picking the ones with all the teeny surface mounted stuff attached so it's just through hole.

    Imagine my surprise when I found these in the component tester kit that arrived today:

    PXL_20240513_064616360.thumb.jpg.31d708369a0c923870416fc8b6ad0598.jpg

    I think I might struggle.  Wonder if I can claim my money back since the pictures clearly showed this stuff on the board.

    easy peasey 🙂 - i'm not an electronics engineer but i work in that environment (sort of) and going back a few years I used to spend some of my time hand making early prototype bits and bobs. My job has moved on and anyway we no longer prototype in house but it was one of my favourite pastimes within the job because its incredibly relaxing populating a PCBA. Not so relaxing when it won't fire up at the end...

  4. 1 hour ago, bosun21 said:

    Yes, it's just that M13 was the best I had ever seen it. I'm going to put the insulation on this weekend whilst it's cloudy. I'm just thinking of how I'm going to insulate the rear of the scope 🤔.

    if you come up with any bright ideas on the last bit then let me know - i'm not sure i need to (i haven't had 1st light on my SCT yet) but if i need to then i want to try and do it without sticking anything to the OTA itself... mmmh.

    • Like 1
  5. Well. Thanks for the original heads up @JeremyS  - what an excellent book this is. 

    Great historical context/scene setting all in one place, Messier’s own observing notes translated directly as “the catalogue” (rather than piecemeal quotes used in other guides),  and then really effective use of the large format for the full descriptions and images of each object. 


    I am strongly motivated to complete my own Messier observations before reading the second half of the book as the descriptions are so thorough as to prejudice one’s own “discovery” process. 

    A reference work indeed. 

    👍🏼

     

    • Like 1
  6.  Nice one Ed,

    On a night a couple of weeks ago when I was supposed to be finishing a session on the sparkly high of M13 I also picked up this galaxy (for the first time). 
     

    It was pretty subtle with an 8” at x141 and skies probably SQM ~20.5 or 20.6 or so. Though subtle it wasn’t terribly hard so a little bit strange why it was a first for me only recently given it’s location. I think you probably do have to look for it quite deliberately; in my skies you wouldn’t see it “by accident” when looking at M13 or drifting off it or hopping to that cluster or away from it. At least I haven’t.

    cheers

     

    • Like 1
  7. it was easy so far @ST_Steve - there is a handle on the back plate (doesn't really show in the pics) that is very convenient - it could do with a complimentary one at the front end for a two handed lift. I may look at adding something on the Losmandy if it feels a bit treacherous/slippy in the dead of night when cold and sleep deprived...

    It's keeping me busy and i haven't looked through it in the dark yet!

    • Like 1
  8. to add another perspective, @cfinn has kindly allowed me to degrade (desaturate) and annotate his recent picture of M101:

    M101-flippedanddesaturatedforvisual-annotated.jpeg.cf765ce15906e257af9c76c8d87a10e1.jpeg

     

    If i really was picking up for example NGC 5461 within M101 in that lower arm then the nearby galaxies NGC 5474 and NGC 5473 would have been positively jumping out at me (as out of focus "stars") wouldn't they? They weren't and didn't!

  9. This is not exactly an observing report though there are observations, I'm using this post to actually ask a question about observing spiral galaxies and HII star forming regions within them...

    A couple of weeks ago i was observing NGC 2903 (with 185mm of aperture) with the express intent of trying to see NGC 2905 within it. I used exit pupils between 1.3mm and 0.6mm (!) with magnifications between x140 to x305. I'm not convinced i observed NGC 2905 but my observing notes for NGC 2903 are:

    Seen in all EP’s. All EPS used to try and tease out NGC 2905. Some bright (stellar) spots seen but i don’t think NGC 2905 conclusively. A rough edged and patchy “smudge” with bright soft stellar spots.

    This is the eyepiece sketch (unfortunately the bright bits are not correctly located to actually be NGC 2905 in this case 😞)

    IMG_5199.jpeg.16c81714e8892d3e579ee3970c9d3a8e.jpeg

     

    This week with 85mm of aperture and using an exit pupil of 1.5mm (predominantly) and a scale of x56 i observed and sketched M101 like this:

    Notes:

    Easy find starting at Mizar, (STF 1831 & STF 1831 on the way).

    Took a while for it to first reveal itself as an averted vision smudge. Disappeared with any use of red light either to navigate SSP or sketch. Growing dark adaptation brought it more definitely even for direct vision. Large, hazy but with variation in the haziness. at least two stellar points or bright spots within it. No sign of the arm structure. Later returning from M102 with the 14mm in the diagonal it was markedly brighter and more definite.

    Sketch:

    IMG_5200.jpeg.b78657958f883c992b2b976ab4a4c06e.jpeg

    the tidy version looks like this - it is sketched as i observed it at x56 but in this tidy version i have used the brightness of M101 i could achieve with a 2.6mm exit pupil (x32):

    IMG_5201.jpeg.67b80d7a91f4f853557ada1ac6cb1c22.jpeg

    My question is...when we observe nearly face on spiral galaxies and see brighter lumps and bumps are they brighter parts of the galaxy i.e. dense star concentrations and/or (if they are in the right place) even the NGC star forming regions (eg. possibly NGC 5461 at 8 o'clock within M101 above) or is it something else at play? Maybe a foreground star or stars perhaps or even "just" the core of the galaxy that we are not seeing as centrally as we possibly would in good conditions? With averted vision it is not easy to be precise with the exact location of these "bright" spots... 

    Its unfeasible for me that i could see a Mag14 NGC within the Mag7.8 M101 with 85mm of aperture though i know that it can be funny how surface brightness works for concentrated objects.

    I'd love to hear the thoughts of experienced observers.

    Cheers

     

    • Like 2
  10. If it works @bosun21 then it may get a bit of aluminium tape as well as a treat. Actually I already did take a crafty look at gold foil on Amazon for a tongue in cheek JWST type look 🤣

     
    I have a good dew band inside here (under this insulation) a few cm back from the font glass. This insulation is foiled backed camping mat. Foil on the outside. 
     

    I have an aluminium dew shield on back order so when that is fitted that and the front of the tube will also get a layer (temporary - I.e. each session) of car windscreen foil shield or “reflectix” type material. Till the dew shield arrives I will just use a wrap of reflectix as the actual dew shield. 
     

    I feel like I have crossed some kind of rubicon with this OTA. 

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  11. Hah. Nice.

    Great minds think alike and all that 👍 - i have the JM Laws book on nature journaling (lovely) and also a "how to" draw birds book by him. Both incredibly useful. I like the approach (in both) that drawing and recording is a skill (can be learned) not a talent (innate). Gives me hope :-).

    Super transferable to astro journalling. 

    Cheers

    • Like 1
  12. 9 minutes ago, Saganite said:

    Hi Joe,

    I had the same problem.  I was at our Society Observatory looking through a 30" Dob, 10pm until midnight, quite an experience, and saw colour in M57 for the first time in my life. I had left my 12" dob cooling in the garden and when I returned to it at about 12.30 am I thought it must have been hit by a shower of rain it was so wet.  The sky stayed clear until about 2.30 am so I had a good long  but very  damp  overdue session.......:happy72:

    you remember Steve i hate hate HATE dew - it just feels so wrong getting astro optics wet! A birding scope i would use in the rain but unsealed/unpurged lenses - ouch.

    It was a bonus to be out though - it's "nip and tuck" for clear spells isn't it! .. and M57 'in colour' sounds fantastic!

    • Like 6
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