Quote:
Originally Posted by RockHound
Hi
Not got a suggestion for a focuser but i am looking at how far forward the scope is being held on the mount and well it does worry me a little. Have you considered some sort of counter weight to attach to the front of the tube?
Regards
Paul
|
What's worrying you? I'm genuinely curious...
The Losmandy dovetail of the RC8 is held very securely in the saddle. There's no possibility of it falling out - I've tested it with a lot of force (carefully).
I'll probably add some counterweights in the future to keep the primary mirror centred over the declination axis.
Quote:
Originally Posted by DJT
I have nothing on the focuser but have you looked at the losmandy weight kits that bintel have for SCT?
http://www.bintel.com.au/Accessories...oductview.aspx
I have these on my GSO RC8 and I have a lot less kit. You have the space available looking at your rig for at least one set which should help bring your scope back.
|
Yep, I've seen them. Very handy. There is a benefit to having the scope sitting a bit forward: I can do an inverted pier flip a bit earlier, go to bed, and let the mount track for a long time without automation software.
The position of the scope hasn't caused me any problems that I'm aware of... but I'm very happy to be corrected or informed otherwise!
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
I had a FLI PDF for several years. I used to run a FLI Proline + filter wheel and MMOAG with guide camera on it. Thats pretty heavy. It worked like a dream. But the Atlas gets a lot of good reviews so if there is any question then the Atlas. Chances are you will be fine with a PDF.
Greg.
|
Thanks Greg. I saw your PDF for sale ad a while back, but it sold while I was still umming and aahing over it
The Atlas seems great but it's quite pricey - it would be the single most expensive component in the whole system, by quite a large margin, so perhaps overkill for now. The PDF seems to be the smallest/lightest focuser that I can find that will be able to handle the image train without sagging or flexing.