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Old 21-10-2009, 12:12 PM
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Moon (James)
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GSO 8" RC vs. GSO 10" RC

Does anyone know, from a theoretical point of view, the gain in performance the extra 2 inches will bring?

I'm especially interested in the off axis performance across a typical CCD chip.
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  #2  
Old 21-10-2009, 02:31 PM
dpastern (Dave Pastern)
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Well, 50% extra light gathering ability with the 10". I don't think either will be a real issue with a typical CCD chip, but I'd still recommend a flattener due to field curvature being part of the RC design, at least as far as I understand it.

Dave
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Old 19-02-2010, 03:01 PM
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Moon (James)
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The answer

I'm going to answer my own question here.

GSO currently have RC scopes with sizes 6", 8", 10" and soon there will be a 12" version and then a 16"

I wanted to know if these larger scopes would support a larger CCD sensor without a field flattener?

After much google searching, I believe the answer is no, they won't.
No matter how big the RC aperture gets, the diffraction limited area stays about the same - (about 14 to 18 mm in diameter)

This is the document that had the answer I was looking for: link
Check out the last page.

With a field flattener the image circle size jumps to over 40mm.

James
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Old 19-02-2010, 03:09 PM
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telecasterguru (Frank)
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The flattener/reducer has not been made available for the 10" yet as I am waiting for them to be released to see how they actually affect the scope.

Frank
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  #5  
Old 19-02-2010, 03:22 PM
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Moon (James)
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Another document on that site also confirms my practical experience: Correct collimation of an RC scope must include an analysis of off axis performance. Link (Read the last sentence in bold)

Correct collimation of an RC scope is not trivial. I know this is not the news many people want to hear, but it's true.

For anyone interested, this is how I do it these days. Link
If anyone has figured out a better way, by all means, please share!

James
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