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Aster
19-06-2007, 04:41 PM
Has anyone ever bench tested, Ronchi or Focault, a GSO 305mm F5 Dobsonian Mirror ?

Just lined my steel tube with cork and had to remove the primary for that purpose. While I had it out A friend of mine and myself done a Ronchi and Focault test with mask and found it quite a bit under corrected with a turned edge.

Is this the norm, or am I just one of the unlucky ones getting a bad mirror ?

Aster

gbeal
19-06-2007, 05:32 PM
How bad was it?
What did the mirror itself cost?
OK, you have seen through me, it is a pair of loaded questions?
To really cap it off, did you suspect this "lack of performance" prior to the test?
I have a cheap and I mean cheap mirror, presumably Chinese, that absolutely rocks. Maybe I was lucky, but given the amount I paid I expected worse.

cristian abarca
19-06-2007, 05:53 PM
About a year ago while at a star party a friend tested a couple of 8 and 10 inch mirrors and they seemed to be pretty good. Regards Cristian

astropolak
19-06-2007, 05:55 PM
Have a read of this:
http://www.wodenoptics.com/cloudy.html
It may have been the same make of mirror (with similar problems) to what you describe.

Joe

iceman
19-06-2007, 06:05 PM
I've got a 12" GSO mirror (and rest of tube!) and it appears to be great to me. I haven't tested it with any of those "official" tests, but from the quality of images I can capture using it, I have no issues with the quality.

For the price I paid, it's perfect!

Have you looked through other 12" scopes to see if the view is better or worse?

janoskiss
19-06-2007, 06:10 PM
These are inexpensive mass produced mirrors. Good for the price but quality varies from one to the next as you can easily see if you star test a few side by side.

Eric48
19-06-2007, 06:19 PM
Believe Bintel had its dob mirrors - which I understand are GSOs - tested in Germany about 2003 using 'null ronchi images' and an 'interfererogram' which indicated an average Strehl ratio of 0.95. I have absolutely no idea what that means - I've simply copied it from a Test Report in Nov/Dec 03 Sky and Space on the Bintel 302 which I got from Bintel and that Report says it would indicate 'very good to excellent quality'. The Report gave the optics a good write up. Can't say whether its still the same but I intend to buy a Bintel 302 dob in next couple of weeks.
Eric

casstony
19-06-2007, 07:28 PM
There is some technical testing of one of these mirrors with images at this translated german site; go to 'Tests of Optics', page 9, 'GSO with divisible tube'.
http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=de&u=http://www.astro-foren.de/&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=1&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dhttp://www.astro-foren.de%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dsafar i%26rls%3Den%26sa%3DG

Starkler
19-06-2007, 08:06 PM
I have seen one or two examples of very good gso mirrors, but I wouldn't think the one tested there is a typical sample. Those numbers are typical of the larger "premium" makers, such as OMI or Galaxy.

Funnily enough, my best ever view of Jupiter was through a newt with obvious undercorrection, but I was lucky enough to viewing during one of those rare moments when the atmosphere "froze solid". How sweet they are.

ballaratdragons
19-06-2007, 09:06 PM
I have looked thru many brands of reflectors in many sizes and must say that the GS mirrrors are very good to terrific. Especially when you pay only several hundred dollars for what you had to pay several thousand dollars for only 10 years ago!

Obviously with mass production there will be the occasional dud, but in general, they are great.

Aster
20-06-2007, 01:10 PM
Thanks Fellows, didn't expect such a number of replies to my queery.

Yes, I could tell that there was some fault in the optics due to the diffraction pattern being different inside/outside focus star testing, before I put the mirror on the test bench.

Yes, I have looked through other 300mm Newtonians and the difference is very small. Seeing conditions, turbulance and many other things play a role in this. But it is there.

No, I am not complaining. One gets what one is prepared to pay. Although that doesn't work at times either. I suppose I expected something a bit closer to the advertised 1/16 wave some retailers floating around for GSO Dobsonians. Also with todays techniques, Teflon/Poleurathene laps the quality should be more consistent.

Yes, I have seen your Photos, Mike, I am green with envy. Looking back 30 years ago when we battled with coarse grain films,freezing/backing emulsion, dodging, burning in images whilst spending hours in the darkroom it looks just to easy nowadays, although I am sure it isn't.

Looks like I just got a mirror which is not quite as good as it could be.

Alex

Aster
20-06-2007, 01:20 PM
Astropolak

Thanks for the pointer, had a look at the article and have to agree going after what can be seen on the bench with my mirror.

Alex

Aster
20-06-2007, 01:39 PM
So I noticed, after looking at your photos. The only other one I have seen who uses tie down straps to secure the tube to the mount.:)

How do you attach the tube to the EQ6 ?

I made a standard wooden cradle with a split wooden ring clamped around the tube so I can rotate the whole lot for more comfortable viewing positions.

Alex

gbeal
20-06-2007, 01:53 PM
Well if it was bought with the 1/16 wave quality assurance, then I would be peeved as well. Take it back. When I bought mine it was advertised at 1/10th wave, and I thought that was a load of cobblers. It is good though, and I am happy.

Aster
20-06-2007, 04:03 PM
Still talking about optical quality. I have been out of practical astronomy for quite some time. Things have changed a lot. New terminology has come in describing the accuracy of the mirror for example. In the old days :), we called it 1/4 wave ,1/8 wave etc. meaning the total wave front at the focus.

Seeing this is my first comercially made telescope I purchased, all others were home made, I am a bit bamboozled with todays terminology.

So, can someone tell me what 1/16 wave RMS or better means in plain total wave front???

Alex

casstony
20-06-2007, 05:13 PM
1/16 wave RMS = roughly 1/4 to 1/5 peak to valley:
http://www.rfroyce.com/standards.htm

Tannehill
20-06-2007, 10:38 PM
This is a long shot, you're experienced, and as you say your friend removed the mirror to test it, so that implies an extremely knowledgable person involved (leagues beyond me). But..sometimes the mirrors clips are too tight and pinch the optics. That variable removed before the test?

Scott

Satchmo
20-06-2007, 11:10 PM
RMS figure is a better indicator of mirror quality as it factors in the relative surface area of an error , although doesn't tell you necessarily of how well the mirror will perform. If most of the error consists pure spherical aberration then there will be a smooth sinusoidal error of around 1/4 wavelength at the 70% zone. Such a mirror can perform well but planetary contrast will be a little washed out.

If the mirror were pretty good spherical aberration wise but say a rolled up or down zone but only effecting the edge, the mirror may still have 1/16 wave RMS, but give a very poor looking star test, and even worse planetary performance. The golden rule for optics is that errors if any want to be smooth and gentle slope. The only optical claims I've seen on the GSO website say 1/16 RMS ( roughly equivelent to the old 1/4 wave Rayleigh criterion) and seems to be a very reasonable and safe claim on the basis of the handful I've seen.

'Numbers' don't mean a lot without seeing what kind of surface shape is involved. Two different 0.95 Strehl mirrors can have vastly different planetary performance. The optician who understands this and why and how will make consistantly better performing mirrors for planetary observation.

In the case of mass produced mirrors you have no real guarantee about what you get so its a kind of lucky dip that you don't encounter in other hobbies such as Hi Fi for instance. It seems to me that people have much higher expectations of mass produced optics than they used to which is neverthless a good thing.

Mark

Aster
21-06-2007, 04:42 PM
Thanks for the thought, Mirror was tested hanging in a sling all by itself

Alex

Aster
21-06-2007, 04:49 PM
That would confirm our readings with a Couder Mask.

6 readings by 2 experienced mirror makers over 5 zones, center to edge, edge to center.

Average, 0, 1.46, 4.32, 5.9, 6.77 mm

Ideal 0, 1.49, 3.071, 4.633, 6.067 mm :)

I think the figures speak for themselves. :(

Alex

Gargoyle_Steve
21-06-2007, 08:52 PM
.... only if you speak mirrorese! ;)


Being the owner of a 12" GSO mirror (and accompaning scope) myself I'd be interested to hear how bad or good those numbers interpret as.

Steve

PCH
23-06-2007, 10:07 PM
Guys,

can anyone offer a comment on the comparative quality of the Skywatcher dobs, as l'm considering buying quite shortly. For those of you more experienced than I - and there's pretty much only the parrot that isn't :) - how do these stack up against the other brands such as Bintel and GSO.

Cheers,

Paul

iceman
24-06-2007, 07:22 AM
Hi Paul.

If I were you, I'd treat them as equal and then base your decision on price and what you get with it.

The mirrors themselves are made in different factories by different companies, but I don't know many who have compared them side by side. Janoskiss has, and he loves his skywatcher. Maybe it's worth looking through some old threads of his and see his thoughts on his skywatcher.

MyAstroShop sell the skywatchers and will do a good deal for you too. Make sure you mention IIS!

duncan
24-06-2007, 10:10 AM
Hi all,
My 12" Bintel Dob shows some stigmatism, but i think it is more the eyepieces than the main optics. When i move my eye across the eyepiece the little flares on some of the brighter stars moves as well or dissappears. Anyway it doesn't bother me much. One day i'll borrow or buy an expensive eyepiece to check. Out of focus stars are nice and round with central donut, but again the donut moves when your eye changes position across the eyepiece to.
Thank God for the internet and easy communication, imagine being totally alone trying to solve all these problems,LOL.
Value for money you can't beat the big Dobs.
Cheers:thumbsup:

Sentinel
24-06-2007, 12:21 PM
Duncan,

Sounds like coma to me, or an eye issue.

If you had astigmatism in the primary the aberration inside focus and outside focus will move 90 degrees. Focus will normally be an issue.

A step up in quality in regards to eyepiece normally has a significant improvement of the view.

duncan
24-06-2007, 12:28 PM
Hi Paul,
Yep, i reckon it is just the cheap eyepieces (came with the scope). Collimation is fine, could do with a set of teenagers eyes though,LOL. What i'm seeing is like a little triangular spear off one side of a star. Might just be my eyes. Middle age it probably is,LOL.
cheers

Matthew Lovell
05-03-2009, 03:08 PM
Hi Aster,

Yes, we have tested a few. I can send you some result of one if you like.

Using Texereau:

Strehl around 88%
Maximum Wave Front Error 1/8

Pretty good eh?

Matthew Lovell

Matthew Lovell
05-03-2009, 03:08 PM
Hi Aster,

Yes, we have tested a few. I can send you some result of one if you like.

Using Texereau:

Strehl around 88%
Maximum Wave Front Error 1/8

Pretty good eh?

Matthew Lovell