Quote:
Originally Posted by want a be
It was easy,I hope the star collimation goes as well as its my 1st time .I know the scope is off now since I replaced the screws,but I did a rough alignment with a laser collimator in the eye piece. I've read that some say to star collimate with the diagonal in and some say to do it with out going right into the rear cell or visual back....Anyone have advise for a first timer?
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Laser-collimate an SCT? Don't think that's possible....
They way I do a "rough" collimation is this: In daylight I stand back about 8-10 mirror diameters away from the scope and look straight into the primary through the corrector plate from the front. Move back and forth a little until you see what should be a series of separate concentric dark circles. If the circles are grouped closer together on one side or another, start adjusting via your Bobs Knobs - as you screw one out - screw another in. After a little while you'll start to see the relationship of what you're doing to the way the concentric circles move. The plan is to get the circles as concentric as you can (with the gaps between the circles the same right the way around the circle), and when you have, you'll be surprised how good your collimation already is. Follow that up at night with a star test and fine-tune from there. The secret is to screw the Bobs Knobs in and out NO MORE than a 1/8th of a turn at a time - it's that fine an adjustment. Do the star-test collimation with the eyepiece mounted straight in the back - without a diagonal.
Cheers
Chris