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Old 17-05-2019, 08:54 AM
Wavytone
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Wavytone is offline
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Killara, Sydney
Posts: 4,147
Choose the right scope to suit what you want to observe.

I would suggest for a dark site the subjects of interest are DSO’s - nebulae and galaxies not possible in the city. Alternatively if in the city, it’s mainly lunar planetary and bright clusters (mak or SCT).

Having had all of these scopes at one time or another I can say the SW180 and C8 will show DSOs better than some might think but they can never match the wide fields of an f/6 newtonian of the same aperture. OTOH if magnification is your game, the SW180 should do better than others at high power on the planets, but the mak and SCt require a mount that tracks - so it’s really your call.

The dob is as simple as it gets. If you go with an SCT or the mak, you’ll have to assemble tripod, level the head carefully, mount, put scope on top, lug out a battery, connect the wires and handset, align with the pole etc before ready to observe. It takes me 39 minutes and that’s assuming I get it all right first try.

What’s more if you think dew is bad with a newtonian its much worse with an SCT. First mistake is attempting to cool the scope as far as you have done - which is why it dewed over.

Personal experience:

1. the SW180 is that it wont dew over so quickly as an SCT (lots of thermal mass in the thick corrector - which is a good thing).

2. Both SCT and mak should be insulated to stop them cooling - this very effective kills the internal tube current from the central baffle, and keeping them warm prevents them dewing over. Both will benefit significantly from a dewcap. Last resort - if the dew over - is a heater strap inside the insulation around the OTA, and a battery to power it.
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