Quote:
Originally Posted by Renato1
Though I'm still not sure how you are pointing your telescope easily without a red dot finder.
Regards,
Renato
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The cross-hair on the 8x50 finder scope I find pretty easy to use. I adjusted it that when the planet is in middle of the eyepiece that it is on the center or the cross-hair (more or less). Not perfect but, close enough that when I had a 250x eyepiece on, it was in view (off to side) as long as I had the cross-hair on the 8x50 in middle.
When it got all fogged up I was using the 30mm eyepiece (50x) to find Saturn, up, down, left right, up down, left, right, up, down, left, right, up, down, left, right, stop, stretch back as its sore from being in that bent position, up, down, left, right, up, down, left, right, comeon!!!!, up, down, left, right, up, down, yawn, left, right, up, down, left, right, look at the moon, ok, Saturn is kinda down right from there, point scope at moon first, then, down, right, up, down, left, right, back sore again, up, down, left, right, up and, left (stretch again back sore), up, down, left... THERE YOU ARE! (20min later).
Last time I got it in very easy, this time it took ages. what a view though! at 50x, it is very small, but all the detail still there, at 100x, it is more pleasing size, and, comfortable because I can sit there watching it without it flying through my view. At 250x it is gorgeous, but I have to set it up to be at the top of the view (or just out) and then just wait for it to pass through, giving me more time to observe before having to move it again.
Spent 3 hours out last night. Was gorgeous. Jupiter also looked amazing! It did have ripples on the edges of the planet at 250x, Saturn did not, so I put the 15mm eyepiece in at 100x and the ripple effect disappeared, the planet was in view much longer (which was nice), but I must say I preferred the planet being larger. Mars was a white ball pretty much, not much visible on it.
So when the view finder was fogged up, I basically used the 30mm, to help me find the planet, then, when in center, I pulled the 30mm out and attached the 15mm 100x, fine adjustment to get it back in middle, then i pulled it out and stuck the 6mm in at 250x, fine adjustment again but was pretty much in view. I used that as a way to aid in getting more magnification without trying to find it at higher magnifications as that was near impossible.
These 2 horrid drawings are basically how it looked at 100x and 250x (size wise) I tried to make it look on your screen the way it 'really' looks through eyepiece.
(there may be a section on forum where perhaps my first experience could be cut/pasted as a new thread for other beginners etc that wonder what you see, don't, usage struggles etc? if it is worth it... don't know - admins/moderators, let me know)