![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I realise I'm never going to get massive wide field views with this
scope, but I'm looking for comments / recommendations for wide field views with etx105. I'm considering a meade SWA eyepiece, but what about focal reducers & nagler or erfle eyepieces. I'm confused by all the possible combinations. What is the minimum magnfication I can use before I see the central mirror spot? TIA john |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "John Collins" wrote in message ... I realise I'm never going to get massive wide field views with this scope, but I'm looking for comments / recommendations for wide field views with etx105. I'm considering a meade SWA eyepiece, but what about focal reducers & nagler or erfle eyepieces. I'm confused by all the possible combinations. What is the minimum magnfication I can use before I see the central mirror spot? Don't confuse 'wide field' with 'wide angle' (of view). The magnification is what controls the former, in inverse manner; the latter is a characteristic of the lens format. -- Graham W http://www.gcw.org.uk/ PGM-FI page updated, Graphics Tutorial WIMBORNE http://www.wessex-astro-society.freeserve.co.uk/ Wessex Dorset UK Astro Society's Web pages, Info, Meeting Dates, Sites & Maps Change 'news' to 'sewn' in my Reply address to avoid my spam filter. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi John,
I used to own an ETX-105 and never managed to crack the rich-field nut quite as I'd have wished. The limiting factors were the constraint of 1.25" eyepieces combined with the long focal length of 1470mm. In practice, the maxiumum 1.25" eyepiece focal length that I could get my hands on was the usual 40mm, a Meade in my case, which has a 44° afov, as the plössl design gets 'pinched' as the focal lengths get much over 30mm. I also bought a 32mm (52° afov) during an eyepiece buying frenzy, not expecting to really need it. 1470mm / 40mm = 36x 44° afov / 36x = 1°12' true field of view ....but then with the 32mm you get a 1°08' true field of view. Guess what, I just used the 32mm in practice. :-) It's a wonderful eyepiece, IMHO, and makes the 40mm redundant. But I wanted richer fields, so I looked at buying an eyepiece with a wider apparant field of view than the usual 52° afov plössl, sooooo, the next step was to try and go 'ultrawide' with something expensive like a Panoptic or Vixen or whatever. Well, the largest Panoptic in 1.25" is the 24mm with its 68° afov, which gives 1°06'. Hmm... And then the Meade SWA 24.8 with 67° afov gives... erm... 1°08', which is the same as the 32mm superplössl. Buggah. That's when I gave up my fruitless quest, saved up for an expensiven short-focal length refractor with a 2" focuser, (a Borg 100ED f/6.4, thanks for asking), and then flogged my ETX at a considerable loss, which did little to offset the pile of dosh I handed over for the Borg. I'm now in rich-field heaven, 'cos my very own 2" Moonfish eyepiece of 30mm and 80° afov gives me me about 3°45' true field of view, which is well over seven moon widths in old money. Should be adequate. However, if you're happy with your ETX in all other respects, then I'd like to give you a bit of advice that might save you a few quid: use that £200 you're prepared to pay for a Meade SWA, and instead buy yourself an ST80 refractor as a second telescope. Put it on a Manfrotto camera tripod with a pan-head, and you have a sweet low-power telescope of 80mm f/400mm. Shove your 32mm 52° afov superplössl into that, and you've got yourself about 4° of true field of view at about 12x, which is possibly too wide. Ric |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Very nicely put. I new that I was never going to get huge fields, but I
think I just want a little more than the 50 arcminutes of the 26mm. I'm not sure I want 4 degree fields, but I take your point. Is it possible to get a focal reducer to get the scope's fl down to about 1000mm, then if my maths is right I'd end up with something around 1.5 degrees at 30x with the 32mm plossl john Hi John, I'd buy the 32mm as a starter (I did!) because that eyepiece will be useful whatever you decide to do. I've never noticed a 1.25" focal reducer, but then again I've never looked for one. It might work if you've got one in mind, so you might have fun experimenting... Ric |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Foundations of General Relativity, Torsion & Zero Point Energy | Jack Sarfatti | Astronomy Misc | 2 | July 7th 04 04:32 AM |
budget wide field eyepeices??? | bob | Amateur Astronomy | 48 | July 2nd 04 03:43 PM |
A focal reducer or an expensive wide field lens? | Jon Isaacs | Amateur Astronomy | 7 | April 24th 04 11:22 AM |
NGC1647 Open cluster - Help in field testing a draft cluster magnitude chart | PrisNo6 | Amateur Astronomy | 21 | March 22nd 04 01:15 AM |