Chillie
24-03-2009, 02:33 AM
Hi everyone,
Last night (Monday) a mate picked me up from home and took me around to his girl friends house to give me a look through his telescope. WOW! The things I saw!:jawdrop: Like the title says, it was a fantastic intro to star gazing.
Equipment:
Sky-Watcher 12" Collapsible Dobsonian
Standard eye pieces and a 2X Barlow lens
Location:
Back yard of mate's girl friend's house
Conditions:
A lot of light pollution (glare from street lights) and the stars were twinkling more than usual. (Sorry about the non-technical terms)
My Mate set up his Dobsonian and pointed it a Saturn. I saw the rings edge on and some moons. He then pointed it towards M55. That showed up as a grey cloud. He showed me a couple of "dust clouds" and a galaxy.
We are in the main flight path between Melbourne and Adelaide and saw a jet flying over head, so he point the scope at that. WE had trouble keeping up with it. I could barely see the outline but he saw the lights from the jet's side windows.
My mate was trying to see the Horse Head Nebula (more on that later) when I spotted a star size object moving rapidly from left to right in the bottom third of the eye piece. I think it might have been a satellite but I'm not sure.
Had a look at the Milkyway and what looks like fog to the naked eye is actually numerous stars.
We used both lens's and the Barlow on both lens's. We had the dust cover on the top tube with the small cap off just to try it, and in some cases, it was an improvement to not having the dust cover on.
My mate has had this scope for one to two months and also owns a short barrelled reflector.
So, was I impressed? Yes! Will I be buying or ordering my own telescope tomorrow? No. I have to do a bit more research as to where to buy, and also work out my finances. But I am planning to order my own 12" Dobsonian in the next month or two.:thumbsup:
Now back to the Horse Head Nebula. My mate has helped me to get started in this hobbie, so I told him that I would ask here and email him a link to this thread (he's not one for joing a forum himself). I have listed what equipment he has at the start of this post (he also has a moon filter). What does he need to see the Horse Head Nebula?
Any advice will be appreciated. BTW My mate's name is Robert.
Thanks for reading about my first experience.
Cheers,
Henry.
Last night (Monday) a mate picked me up from home and took me around to his girl friends house to give me a look through his telescope. WOW! The things I saw!:jawdrop: Like the title says, it was a fantastic intro to star gazing.
Equipment:
Sky-Watcher 12" Collapsible Dobsonian
Standard eye pieces and a 2X Barlow lens
Location:
Back yard of mate's girl friend's house
Conditions:
A lot of light pollution (glare from street lights) and the stars were twinkling more than usual. (Sorry about the non-technical terms)
My Mate set up his Dobsonian and pointed it a Saturn. I saw the rings edge on and some moons. He then pointed it towards M55. That showed up as a grey cloud. He showed me a couple of "dust clouds" and a galaxy.
We are in the main flight path between Melbourne and Adelaide and saw a jet flying over head, so he point the scope at that. WE had trouble keeping up with it. I could barely see the outline but he saw the lights from the jet's side windows.
My mate was trying to see the Horse Head Nebula (more on that later) when I spotted a star size object moving rapidly from left to right in the bottom third of the eye piece. I think it might have been a satellite but I'm not sure.
Had a look at the Milkyway and what looks like fog to the naked eye is actually numerous stars.
We used both lens's and the Barlow on both lens's. We had the dust cover on the top tube with the small cap off just to try it, and in some cases, it was an improvement to not having the dust cover on.
My mate has had this scope for one to two months and also owns a short barrelled reflector.
So, was I impressed? Yes! Will I be buying or ordering my own telescope tomorrow? No. I have to do a bit more research as to where to buy, and also work out my finances. But I am planning to order my own 12" Dobsonian in the next month or two.:thumbsup:
Now back to the Horse Head Nebula. My mate has helped me to get started in this hobbie, so I told him that I would ask here and email him a link to this thread (he's not one for joing a forum himself). I have listed what equipment he has at the start of this post (he also has a moon filter). What does he need to see the Horse Head Nebula?
Any advice will be appreciated. BTW My mate's name is Robert.
Thanks for reading about my first experience.
Cheers,
Henry.