Retrograde
21-08-2014, 10:50 AM
I always intended that my North Group ED102 triplet would be my 'learner' scope.
It has served me pretty well so far and I continue to learn a lot about imaging but one thing I've noticed is that on bright objects like the Moon or planets there is quite noticeable lateral chromatic aberration that seems consistent no matter where in the field the object is - always red on the left of the object and blue on the right.
This is primarily noticeable photographically (see attached pic). Visually it seems pretty reasonable and star images look OK (if maybe not quite perfect outside focus).
My question is this:
would it be worthwhile getting it collimated by someone who knows what they are doing or is this about the best I can expect with a cheap scope?
I did have a couple of minor accidents early on when the altitude lock on my alt-az mount slipped whilst the scope was out of balance and the tube banged quite hard on the azimuth plate so it's possible the collimation has gone out because of this.
Whilst I do plan to buy something of much higher quality down the track I would still like to maximise what the scope is capable of in the mean-time.
Hope some experienced refractor people can offer some insight,
cheers,
Pete
It has served me pretty well so far and I continue to learn a lot about imaging but one thing I've noticed is that on bright objects like the Moon or planets there is quite noticeable lateral chromatic aberration that seems consistent no matter where in the field the object is - always red on the left of the object and blue on the right.
This is primarily noticeable photographically (see attached pic). Visually it seems pretty reasonable and star images look OK (if maybe not quite perfect outside focus).
My question is this:
would it be worthwhile getting it collimated by someone who knows what they are doing or is this about the best I can expect with a cheap scope?
I did have a couple of minor accidents early on when the altitude lock on my alt-az mount slipped whilst the scope was out of balance and the tube banged quite hard on the azimuth plate so it's possible the collimation has gone out because of this.
Whilst I do plan to buy something of much higher quality down the track I would still like to maximise what the scope is capable of in the mean-time.
Hope some experienced refractor people can offer some insight,
cheers,
Pete