Quote:
Originally Posted by netwolf
Hammerman, i was wondering about trying it in diffrent locations to get a comfortable spot for it. What is bugee cord? and where can i get that from?
rmcpb. ya i thought of replacing the finder too, maybe moding the telrad base to fit the Finder base..
|
You don't need a bungee cord. You can also use a length of electrical wire, or some thin rope, basically anything that you can snuggly tie all the way around the scope OTA and the Telrad, just to hold it steady for a short while so you can test it out.
I wouldn't even think about getting rid of the finderscope. It makes a real nice compliment to the Telrad. The reason why? Simple. The Telrad is only a 1X finder. It doesn't magnify a thing. A finderscope does magnify. A 9x50 magnifies 9 times, as I'm sure you know.
The problem with the finderscope is sometimes it's hard to tell exactly where you are pointing it because of the magnification.... (hmm.... do I see Sirius in the finder? or just a close bright star?) In the daytime you set up your telescope and align all three things on a distant object, the telescope first, then the finderscope, then the Telrad. OK, now you know that all 3 are pointing at the same thing in the night sky. Let's go to nighttime....
Let's say that you want to find M41 which is in Canis Major. The only star you can see nearby with the naked eye is Sirius, which is a bit away. The Telrad only magnifies 1X. You get Sirius centered in the Telrad. Now you know that your finderscope is pointing at the same object. Now you can look through the finderscope and see stars that you couldn't see through the Telrad, and looking at Sirius, and your starcharts, you can now starhop over to your intended target. So putting it simply, the Telrad gets you close and eliminates the guesswork of the finderscope, then the finderscope gets you where you want to go.
I've never been a fan of GoTo electronics. I like to find things on my own, not have the computer do it for me. (but to each his own on this. I don't hold anything against others who use GoTo.) Anyway, since I started using the Telrad AND the finderscope together, I've found a LOT more faint fuzzies than I ever could just using one or the other.
By the way.... what type of a scope are you putting it on? Here's a link to a photo on my web site that shows the Telrad and the finderscope together on my XT8.
http://home.comcast.net/~astrohammer/Telradand9x50RA.jpg
Hope this helps!