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  #1  
Old 15-01-2012, 12:35 AM
loki78 (Jon)
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Graduation from 1st scope - Feedback appreciated!

It's time to graduate from my first scope. An 8" dob that has been fun, but now I know a bit more (knowledge is dangerous - and expensive) and have more of an idea what I want to do, it's time to move on - and up.

I want something that is somewhat portable, good visual and imaging work and have tentatively decided on a Meade 10" LX200ACF. Was looking at the CPC11 as well but reviews on the optics being better in the meade, flatter field, less coma and being generally better for imaging have pushed me in that direction. So any info from people who have had or have this scope would be great.

Also, suggestions on getting the whole setup w/ wedge for imaging or just the OTA and sticking it on a HEQ5 or EQ6 would be great.

If you think my line of thinking is absurd and I need a slap, then i'm happy to hear that too

Last edited by loki78; 15-01-2012 at 05:17 AM.
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Old 15-01-2012, 10:27 AM
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g__day (Matthew)
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Be interested to hear what people think, but a 10" SCT on a EQ6 is probably doable in sheltered conditions if you want to image for long duration, prime focus shots.

For any proposed astro-photography:

1. Will you be using a focal reducer or not - what will you be targeting that suites a 10" SCT faint nebulae?
2. How will you guide (and what will this gear weight), and how will it be mounted - side by side, straddled, on axis or off axis guider?
3. What imaging and guiding cameras are you considering?

I would believe a sturdy enough mount will let you do what you want - if you set it all up well. Personally I wouldn't want anything less than an EQ6 to mount what you are considering. And I'd opt for an OAG (< $250) versus and ONAG ($1,000) over a second scope + attachments for you guide set up. Its very hard to get ride of all differential flexure required to guide at long focal lenght using a second scope.

Matthew

Last edited by g__day; 16-01-2012 at 12:01 AM.
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  #3  
Old 16-01-2012, 02:09 PM
Poita (Peter)
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I have a 10" Meade ACF on an EQ6Pro, after upgrading the mount with a bit of TLC it works really well.
It would be too much for a HEQ5 really.
If you have an EQ6Pro, you are welcome to borrow my scope and see what you think before plonking down the cash for one.

Using Off Axis Guiding is really a must if you are not using a reducer, it is a challenging focal length.
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  #4  
Old 16-01-2012, 02:19 PM
adman (Adam)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by loki78 View Post
Also, suggestions on getting the whole setup w/ wedge for imaging or just the OTA and sticking it on a HEQ5 or EQ6 would be great.
I would think just the OTA on an equatorial mount would be best judging from others comments about trying to wedge an alt/az.

Adam
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Old 16-01-2012, 02:23 PM
Poita (Peter)
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Originally Posted by adman View Post
I would think just the OTA on an equatorial mount would be best judging from others comments about trying to wedge an alt/az.

Adam
Too right, avoid the wedge like the plague. I find them unwieldy and nothing but grief. Could be my innate uselessness, but I got nowhere with a wedge, and that was on an 8" scope, I would hate to try it on the 10".
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  #6  
Old 16-01-2012, 05:11 PM
loki78 (Jon)
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Thanks guys. A few problems i have is i work a lot and shift work, so i barely get to go to any society meetings and therefore don't get to try out other peoples gear, so online is really the only place I can get most of the information.

I'm still tossing up a few options really. Considering still the full LX200 (or even now CPC1100 XLT) setup just for visual and some short exposure planetary stuff which from what I have read they should be fairly capable of, then later on a G11 and qualityt apo when i get more seriously into DSO imaging.

So questions of OAG/scope, what reducers etc, whilst important, come later I think (though I am keeping those questions firmly in mind also)

Then i was swayed a bit in the other direction when i read about Celestrons capabilities with hyperstar. It looks fantastic and promising, but i don't know anyone who has used it personally.

My time frame will be hopefully looking to get this in 3-5 weeks time so i am trying to gather as much information and help till then.

So basically, my questions from this now are opinions on the above scopes for use on short exposure planetary stuff and whether or not anyone has any experience with hyperstar.

A lot of stuff in all forums degenerates into 2 sides. We love product A, product B is crap. And We love product B, product A is crap. So with my limited ability to get out to events/meetings and hands on (I will be speaking to the guys at Andrews/Bintel) this is my primary source of info so thanks all for your help
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  #7  
Old 16-01-2012, 05:56 PM
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Bassnut (Fred)
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The full LX200 would be fine for visual and short exposure planetary, integrated plonk and go, I don't think the wedge would be critical for planetary?. But would you be happy just with that long term?. Just thinking about DSO changes everything. Since you seem to be time challenged and want be portable, then an OTA (Meade or Celestron is no biggy, go by price and weight) an EQ6 or G11 or if you can stretch an MX. The mount is everything for DSO, more money=less greif and less set up time.
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  #8  
Old 16-01-2012, 06:25 PM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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Jon

If you are fit and averagily strong I would totally recommend a 12" LX200 ACF on the wedge and with the giant field tripod as your next scope A good step up in aperture while still remaining manageable - I used to set mine up from scratch several nights a week no problem and I had the whole imaging kit and caboodle. A brilliant out of the box all round performer scope and the views visually are fantastic.

I had its predecessor the 12" LX200 GPS and eventually put it under a dome. I detected the horsehead neb under dark skies and managed several 15th mag galaxies, detail in the red spot of Jupiter and split a 0.6" double star! It is quite easily used for long exposure photography and gives good results for both plaentary and deep sky - heaps of accessories available too!

Here are some imaging results I got with its predecessor the 12" LX200GPS and simple piggyback autoguiding and remember the optics are now better, to handle larger chips!:

NGC 1365

NGC 1232

Trifid jet

M17

There are lots of online forums and info for these kits too - great bang for your buck.

Make it easy on yourself and just order a 12" LX200 ACF (from BINTEL) and be done with it

There you go no bull just 100% from experience

Mike
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  #9  
Old 16-01-2012, 10:00 PM
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Octane (Humayun)
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Jon,

Buy a refractor.

H
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  #10  
Old 16-01-2012, 10:09 PM
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AG Hybrid (Adrian)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Octane View Post
Jon,

Buy a refractor.


H
I just did .

I went from a 6 inch newt. To a 12 inch Dob. Ive realised I wanted a Rich Field Telescope but also light enough to be a grab and go.
I converted my EQ3-2 Mount into Alt AZ mode. The 4 inch refractor I just got will mount up perfectly. The 4 incher promises 3.5 degree field of views with the ES 30mm. By contrast the 12 inch dob could only manage 1.5 degrees, and it had a huge 6.2 mm exit pupil.

I'm very excited to say the least. Sometimes a different type of view can be an observing upgrade.

Of course in regards to the original posters query, I do have the luxury of having a 12 inch telescope already so I always have that choice if I want to go deep. Perhapes a larger scope is the best approach when looking for an upgrade.

In regards to the LX200 12". The fork and OTA combo weighs 34 kilo's last check. The reason why Strongmanmike can set it up "several" times a week is.... well have you seen the pictures of him? He could bench press a Volkswagen or suplex a Cadillac.
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  #11  
Old 16-01-2012, 10:26 PM
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renormalised (Carl)
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Talking

Quote:
Originally Posted by AG Hybrid View Post

In regards to the LX200 12". The fork and OTA combo weighs 34 kilo's last check. The reason why Strongmanmike can set it up "several" times a week is.... well have you seen the pictures of him? He could bench press a Volkswagen or suplex a Cadillac.
Well, I'll say it then....he's built like the proverbial brick outhouse, and then some!!!!

Keck came of its mount recently....they got Mike to lift it back on!!!!

They deliberately took it off again, just to watch Mike come back and put it back on for the second time
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  #12  
Old 16-01-2012, 10:36 PM
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alocky (Andrew lockwood)
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Any decent motorised Dob will be fine for planetary imaging with a video, and a 16" is easy to manage singlehanded. The difference for visual observation between an 8 and a 10 is relatively minor in practice. The jump to a 16 is a much more natural step up for visual work. Even a well designed 18" can be moved around in a small car, and most of them don't need you to be climbing ladders to reach the eyepiece. Visually, aperture rules.
The main reason a 10" SCT EQ would be an upgrade from an 8" dob is if astrophotography is going to be a big part of your hobby, which it sounds like it will be. Also, as others have said, if you're planning on using the full focal length of an SCT, the mount is going to be the limiting factor for your imaging. Then the fun starts - better camera, filters, then a bigger scope, then a bigger mount, then a new camera will emerge so you can justify a bigger scope, which will need a field flattener and a bigger mount, so it's worth buying the newest gen camera with a guide chip inside...etc... until your family desert you and you come to your senses living inside the shipping carton your RCOS25" arrived in...
cheers,
Andrew.
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  #13  
Old 17-01-2012, 10:40 AM
Poita (Peter)
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I'm a weed and I have no trouble setting up the 10" ACF, I haven't hefted a 12" but it would be a great deal heavier and more awkward I would wager.

I have used hyperstar, and it is pretty amazing, but it has limitations of course.
If the Celestron and the Meade were the same money, I'd go with the celestron to have the option of faster/hyperstar.

Avoid the fork mount, there is no point paying for the expense if you want to do photography down the road, get the OTA and an EQ mount that can cope with it.

If you buy the OTA 2nd hand, it would leave more money to spend on the mount.
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  #14  
Old 17-01-2012, 11:04 AM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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Yes the 12" LX200 ACF is maybe a bit of an effort for some for a couple of minutes, really only the bit where you actually lift and place the forks in the wedge...but then you have a great setup

Old falling apart soft Brick Dunny Mike

PS. I pressed the whole OTA fork assembly (with tube counter weights attached), overhead for about 8 repititions back in 2002...just as a challenge ...wouldn't try that now ...so it isn't THAT heavy
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  #15  
Old 17-01-2012, 12:14 PM
Poita (Peter)
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Take your height into account too. If you are 5'6" then it is a lot harder to get the scope up onto the mount than if your are 6'3".
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  #16  
Old 17-01-2012, 01:15 PM
loki78 (Jon)
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haha well I'm over 6'1" and built like a tank so that shouldn't be too much of a concern. That said, I don't want it to be like a workout every time I want to use the thing!!!

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  #17  
Old 17-01-2012, 02:10 PM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by loki78 View Post
haha well I'm over 6'1" and built like a tank so that shouldn't be too much of a concern. That said, I don't want it to be like a workout every time I want to use the thing!!!

Well then my advice stands fine then - viva la non wimpy astronomers

I found the set up well worth the effort, it was a fabulous scope and did me fine for several years and was very productive.

You can just set it up in Alt az mode too for visual and even Barry Gerdes can do that - easy!

Mike
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  #18  
Old 17-01-2012, 03:12 PM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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Originally Posted by renormalised View Post
Keck came of its mount recently....they got Mike to lift it back on!!!!

They deliberately took it off again, just to watch Mike come back and put it back on for the second time
Nearly true.....

http://www.pbase.com/strongmanmike20...21587/original

and

http://www.pbase.com/strongmanmike20...21449/original

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  #19  
Old 17-01-2012, 03:47 PM
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g__day (Matthew)
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I would expect the Meade ACF optics are better than the standard Celestron ones (I use Celestron myself) and about the same quality (or maybe a bit better (?) than the Celestron HD version.

I believe Meade still has a mirror lock where Celestron don't. With Celestron you need a Feathertouch fine focuser to minimise mirror slop during fine focusing - Its really annoying until you can eliminate mirror flop / slop!

Personally I love the C9.25 carbon fibre OTA - it holds its focus during significant temperature change extremely well.

A few questions for you Jon will improve answers here:

1. How decent is the clarity and darkness of the night skies where you will be setting up?
2. Any idea what sorts of targets you will be imaging? If its small faint Dark Sky Objects (DSOs) that tells us a lot.

I'm quite suprised my Mike's advice - the 12" on a fork with a wedge and piggy backed guiding; but he would know - few of us are in the realm of experience and capability Mike has achieved. Question for you Mike - can someone new at the game set up the wedge easily and is the Meade gear that robust that piggybacked guiding won't bring differential flexures issues to ruin guiding?

I certainly don't have near your experience - I could only get guiding at 2.3 metre focal lenght working spot on when I did it off axis from the primary OTA.

Cheers all, Matt
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  #20  
Old 17-01-2012, 04:00 PM
loki78 (Jon)
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Hey Matt, yeah the primary mirror lock on the meade was one of the main reasons I was headed in their direction, along with the clean optics.

EdgeHD stuff for celestron evens that out a bit, but is a hell of a lot more expensive and probably out of my price range unless i come down in size, which i didn't really want to do.

Though the fastar/hyperstar stuff for the celestrons still keeps their regular OTA's heavily in the picture. It's all going to be a trade off one way or the other I suppose.

I live in Sydney, so i'll be all over the place from locally to travelling a bit so the skies will vary a lot i would imagine.

Target wise it will be planetary stuff and the easier (and larger/brighter) DSO's. I wouldn't attempt to do the harder stuff without more specialised gear, which will come later its part of the eventual plans too
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