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Planning to buy a first telescope? |
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| Mar13-12, 10:16 PM | #120 |
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Planning to buy a first telescope?
Well since it doesn't seem there are any enormous differences between the two, and I found my original one for cheaper and with better eyepieces, I think I'm going to pull the trigger on that one. Thanks everyone for your help!
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| Mar14-12, 08:00 AM | #121 |
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But for light-gathering ability (which is what you want in order to see dim objects), they cannot be beat. |
| Mar16-12, 01:39 PM | #122 |
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| Jun24-12, 09:28 PM | #123 |
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Wouldn't do me any good. I live in the middle of a major city, and, the last time I looked at the night sky at my true local astronomical midnight, it looked like God had turned out the lights.
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| Jun24-12, 09:37 PM | #124 |
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I'm lucky - I live right on the lake, which is to the south, so at least half my sky is relatively dark. |
| Jun24-12, 11:22 PM | #125 |
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| Jun25-12, 08:13 AM | #126 |
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Spoiler
: biggrin :
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| Jun25-12, 01:59 PM | #127 |
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| Sep12-12, 02:25 PM | #128 |
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Hey ya'll. I just ordered up this telescope and am waiting for it to come in the mail now.
http://www.telescope.com/Telescopes/...335/p/9024.uts What do you guys think? Any good? I thought 90mm was pretty big for a refractor. What do you think i'll be able to see best with this? |
| Sep12-12, 03:39 PM | #129 |
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I should mention that the mount illustrated in the ad is very light. If the wind is very light or non-existent, you can probably squeak by, but you might have to stiffen that mount somehow. Good luck. |
| Sep12-12, 04:30 PM | #130 |
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Thanks I appreciate the advice! What would you suggest I do to stiffen up the legs? Do you think velcro ankle weights would do the trick?
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| Sep14-12, 09:45 PM | #131 |
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Mentor
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For a first scope that's a good choice. My first was the standard 60mm x 900mm. With your larger lens, you'll get brighter and higher resolution images. Manual equatorial is also a good choice, but make sure you really put in the effort required to learn to use it properly. It makes observing a lot easier and you'll also learn about the sky more.
Regarding stiffening the legs, I don't consider that a priority. Yes, it may help but you've got a lot of other fish to fry before that becomes a significant issue for you. Heck, my rig weighs 150 lb and I still find the best way to keep it steady is simply not to touch it when looking through it. |
| Sep15-12, 03:40 PM | #132 |
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Turbo is right about the mount being very light for that scope. My son's C4 (Celestron 102mm f9.4) refractor sits on a CG-4 very stably. That is likely the best inexpensive mount for your scope. You can modify the legs of your CG-2 as was described here if you want to try that first. It is a great modification to replace those aluminum legs with wooden ones and it requires very little in the way of tools. (drill, sandpaper, rasp or jigsaw, adjustable wrenches) It's not necessary to replace the round stainless steel legs that come with the new CG-4 mount.
You may find that the view bounces around in a light breeze and blame the legs for that. What I have found with lightweight mounts and long tube scopes is that the backlash on the RA is the biggest culprit and that can't be addressed by stiffening the legs. You can help it a bit by tightening the mesh on the pinion/RA gear and eliminating as much as possible the pinion axis play (thrust-type play). Diagnose the play by placing your fingers on the pinion axis and slightly tap the OTA. You will definitely feel the play. 90 mm is a pretty nice apeture for grab and go and the 1000mm focal length is the sweet spot for pretty good magnification and moderately wide field. You should be able to have great lunar and planetary views as well as globular clusters and double stars. With wide angle eyepieces like the Meade SWA 28 or 34mm (used) you will have fantastic views of globulars, larger nebula like M-42 and most of the open clusters like the Pleiades or the Double Cluster. You might find that there is a little purple color at high magnification for bright objects but that can largely be eliminated with a minus violet filter or the Baader Contrast Booster which is also a fine Mars filter. |
| Sep25-12, 10:57 AM | #133 |
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Thanks for all the great advice everyone! I have gotten pretty good at finding stuff with the telescope. So far I have seen Jupiter, Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, Pleiades, Luna (can't wait for the harvest moon), Vega, Deneb, Altair, Aldebaran, Polaris (obviously), and a few others I don't know the names of yet.
I just ordered a 3x Barlow and a Nebula Filter from Orion. I'm hoping that these will allow me to see Andromeda Galaxy. Does anyone have any advice for spotting Andromeda Galaxy? Also I believe I can see some smudges on the screen of the star diagonal. Anyone have any tips on cleaning that bit? Also could ya'll give me some advice on which one of these Orthoscopics is better? http://agenaastro.com/kokusai-kohki-...piece-7mm.html http://www.teleskop-express.de/shop/...----Kasai.html All your advice is appreciated! -Jack |
| Sep27-12, 04:22 PM | #134 |
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| Sep27-12, 11:23 PM | #135 |
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I agree, aside from perhaps a moon filter, they are a waste of money for the vast majority of amateurs. The money is better spent on accessories like dielectric diagonals.
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| Sep28-12, 12:56 AM | #136 |
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