Actually you are right :-)
Enter just 7.1*60 = 426 arcmins
Sorry.. I was confused this with Apparent Field of View :-)
When I checked in CdC, it is just FOV (that is not apparent, but real field of view).
Bojan
While I have been waiting for the clouds to clear I browsed the net for 8x50 FOV statistics.
They are all different!!! By googling I was given figures of 345, 336, 252, 420 etc.
EVERY site I went to had a different FOV figure for the same right-angled GS 8x50 finder!
Definately makes Geoffs idea the best way. Once I get the stars in the FOV in my finder I will do a drawing of it, compare in CDC, then I will know what my finders FOV is!
Sheeesh, and I thought this had a simple stock-standard answer.
Ken I have a GSO 8x50 RA finder (which hasn't been used for a while) but from memory it's FOV is almost exactly the distance between Alpha and Gamma Crucis, which should be an easy and readily checkable angular distance in CDC, etc.
For newbies (like myself a few months ago) that's the top and bottom stars of the Souther Cross "kite".
My finder either just barely fits both of these stars in at once, or just barely doesn't ... I'll check for you tomorrow night (locked away inside at work now until 7am, can't get to the sky - or finder - right now).
If you look at, or close to, the celestial equator; set a star at the xtreme edge of the field, the time it takes in minutes, without a RA drive, to drift from one edge to the other times 15 will give the field of view in minutes of arc.