§AB
02-01-2008, 09:39 AM
Well I was taking my scope outside to cool last night in preperation for an observing session. I took the front dust cover off and was absolutely mortified to discover a spider had set up shop inside the tube just behind
the secondary :scared: The spider was hanging amongst a mass of spider web crisscrossing the tube. Ofocurse, there was that sinking feeling - now I know what it feels like! :P I realised that the mirrors could potentially be laced with web, but to my relief the secondary was untouched. Thank god! I hastily evicted the critter by just grabbing it - i wanted it outta there immediately. Now came the matter of the cobwebs. I got a brush and long handled duster and spent about an hour trying to locate and remove every bit of web. Everytime I angled the torch differently, a new strand would show up, some uncomfortably close to the primary :scared: Eventually I managed to clear all the web from the tube. I also aimed the torch at the primary to check if theres any web on it. Ofcourse, the sight that confronted me was horrific, but luckily there didn't appear to be any web on the surface of the mirror. Guess I got lucky.
But I wonder how the hell a spider could get in there when the scope is stored with dust caps on and has a shower cap covering the primary end. Maybe during one of my observing sessions it crawled in? ANyway, I hope this doesnt happen again, next time I might not be so lucky :scared:
the secondary :scared: The spider was hanging amongst a mass of spider web crisscrossing the tube. Ofocurse, there was that sinking feeling - now I know what it feels like! :P I realised that the mirrors could potentially be laced with web, but to my relief the secondary was untouched. Thank god! I hastily evicted the critter by just grabbing it - i wanted it outta there immediately. Now came the matter of the cobwebs. I got a brush and long handled duster and spent about an hour trying to locate and remove every bit of web. Everytime I angled the torch differently, a new strand would show up, some uncomfortably close to the primary :scared: Eventually I managed to clear all the web from the tube. I also aimed the torch at the primary to check if theres any web on it. Ofcourse, the sight that confronted me was horrific, but luckily there didn't appear to be any web on the surface of the mirror. Guess I got lucky.
But I wonder how the hell a spider could get in there when the scope is stored with dust caps on and has a shower cap covering the primary end. Maybe during one of my observing sessions it crawled in? ANyway, I hope this doesnt happen again, next time I might not be so lucky :scared: