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#1
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Now getting back into the astro hobby after a few years recess, I've noticed
a trend towards refractors. I visited a local SP a few weeks ago and I'll bet close to 70% of the scopes there were refractors. I'm curious as to what's caused this trend or shift as when I was active in the past, close to 15 years ago, the "light bucket" Dobsonian seemed to be the favorite at star parties. How does a refractor, which I seldom see in apertures greater than 100mm due to expense, compare with a light bucket Dob or reflector? It certainly can't be DSO's as an 18" Dob would win that battle hands down. I would also think that the larger reflector would be the winner for planets too, especially if it has a good mirror. So, what is the appeal? Portability, but what else? There must be something I'm missing regarding their appeal especially when you compare the cost per aperture differences between refractors and other scopes. Thanks, Juan |
#2
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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 16:31:08 GMT, "Juan Calculus" wrote:
Now getting back into the astro hobby after a few years recess, I've noticed a trend towards refractors. I visited a local SP a few weeks ago and I'll bet close to 70% of the scopes there were refractors. I'm curious as to what's caused this trend or shift as when I was active in the past, close to 15 years ago, the "light bucket" Dobsonian seemed to be the favorite at star parties. How does a refractor, which I seldom see in apertures greater than 100mm due to expense, compare with a light bucket Dob or reflector? It certainly can't be DSO's as an 18" Dob would win that battle hands down. I would also think that the larger reflector would be the winner for planets too, especially if it has a good mirror. So, what is the appeal? Portability, but what else? There must be something I'm missing regarding their appeal especially when you compare the cost per aperture differences between refractors and other scopes. I don't know if there is a real craze, a marketing craze, or no craze at all. But I do know that if you go to a star party, not one telescope in 20 is a refractor. People who actually use telescopes visually know what makes sense. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
#3
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I don't think there is a craze going on. I think people are choosing the
right teleswcope for the right job. Most amatuers that I know prefer 20cm SCT's as their primary scope, larger Dobs are a distant 2nd. The refractors are being bought often as travel scopes because they can be easily carrier on airplanes. Also in the last 15 years there has been major improvements in refractor designs. Terry On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 16:31:08 +0000, Juan Calculus wrote: Now getting back into the astro hobby after a few years recess, I've noticed a trend towards refractors. I visited a local SP a few weeks ago and I'll bet close to 70% of the scopes there were refractors. I'm curious as to what's caused this trend or shift as when I was active in the past, close to 15 years ago, the "light bucket" Dobsonian seemed to be the favorite at star parties. How does a refractor, which I seldom see in apertures greater than 100mm due to expense, compare with a light bucket Dob or reflector? It certainly can't be DSO's as an 18" Dob would win that battle hands down. I would also think that the larger reflector would be the winner for planets too, especially if it has a good mirror. So, what is the appeal? Portability, but what else? There must be something I'm missing regarding their appeal especially when you compare the cost per aperture differences between refractors and other scopes. Thanks, Juan |
#4
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So, what is the appeal?
Portability, super quality image, minimum cool down time, contrast, splitting and measuring double-stars refractor is the best, large aperture scope more sensitive for atmospheric disturbances, refractor has the largest field of view for visual or photo purposes etc... Primarily for CCD photography, since the advance in technology and affordability of CCD's, you don't need a large aperture telescope, which require heavy large mount, to take excelent images of DSO's.. Julius "Juan Calculus" wrote in message ink.net... Now getting back into the astro hobby after a few years recess, I've noticed a trend towards refractors. I visited a local SP a few weeks ago and I'll bet close to 70% of the scopes there were refractors. I'm curious as to what's caused this trend or shift as when I was active in the past, close to 15 years ago, the "light bucket" Dobsonian seemed to be the favorite at star parties. How does a refractor, which I seldom see in apertures greater than 100mm due to expense, compare with a light bucket Dob or reflector? It certainly can't be DSO's as an 18" Dob would win that battle hands down. I would also think that the larger reflector would be the winner for planets too, especially if it has a good mirror. So, what is the appeal? Portability, but what else? There must be something I'm missing regarding their appeal especially when you compare the cost per aperture differences between refractors and other scopes. Thanks, Juan |
#5
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"Juan Calculus" wrote:
Now getting back into the astro hobby after a few years recess, I've noticed a trend towards refractors. I visited a local SP a few weeks ago and I'll bet close to 70% of the scopes there were refractors. Was this local star party a one night thing, like a club observing evening? If it was just for the evening it may be that people couldn't be bothered to transport and set up their larger scopes for the evening. Tim -- Foo. |
#6
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I don't know if there is a real craze, a marketing craze, or no craze at all.
But I do know that if you go to a star party, not one telescope in 20 is a refractor. People who actually use telescopes visually know what makes sense. A lot of people use them for imaging, which you are not going to see at star parties. It is hard to do with normal Dobs. People who buy high end apos know exactly why they do so. Roland Christen |
#8
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As others mention, there are some advantages to smaller refractors, and
also to the larger 6" plus refractors, mainly critical planetary observation. Sad thing is, there are other designs, specifically compound designs (MN's MCT's SCT's) which also could be capable of first class performance, but ultra high quality examples of these scopes I mention just aren't all that commom at run of the mill star parties. I think one would certainly be very impressed with an ultra high quality SCT design, (In which there are a few sophisticated variants) with hand figured optics to 1/10 wave system, and first class mechanics. I'm sure many would cringe at the thought of a $5K-$7K 8" SCT though. Would be nice though to see a company, or two arise in the future, who could re-work off the shelf commercial SCT Optics for a reasonable cost. Guess we can dream, can't we? :-) Mark |
#9
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In article ,
Chris L Peterson wrote: On 20 Nov 2004 19:11:00 GMT, (Chris1011) wrote: I don't know if there is a real craze, a marketing craze, or no craze at all. But I do know that if you go to a star party, not one telescope in 20 is a refractor. People who actually use telescopes visually know what makes sense. A lot of people use them for imaging, which you are not going to see at star parties. It is hard to do with normal Dobs. People who buy high end apos know exactly why they do so. Yup. That's why I used the term "visually", and referred to star parties. In my book, a refractor has two primary uses- imaging, and visual for travel or rapid setup (typically, casual use). _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com Roland's right, you're wrong. Refractors are a better instrument for their size than newts or dobs. they're better for photography, deployment, contrast, and ease of use. Big dobs/newts are a drag to move around, the tracking is cumbersome, and they require ladders/stools/etc to have on hand to cover the zenith, or anywhere near it. Refractor images are excellent, they are portable, they are outstanding visually AND photographically. In a nutshell, the refractor is the perfect ALL around scope. That ability to go deeper either visually or photographically is not up for debate, everybody on SAA agrees (or should) that big newts and dobs go deeper(in less time photograpically, and all the time visually) But that doesn't make them (for most users) appropriate, considering all of their downsides. The refractor is the perfect telescope, and people who buy expensive ones usually have come to that observation on their own, with no counseling from this group, or any other. Nobody is going to spend three grand on a refractor (or not) based on anything anybody in SAA has said, they're already way beyond that and making up their own minds based on experience. What happens at star parties indicates trends of a very, very small percentage of star party attendees. And you're wrong to boot.....the largest refractors, the newest refractors, and the coolest refractors are always at big star parties, so I don't know what you're talking about. The fact that there is ten times as many scopes at a star party that cost five times less than a big refractor isn't indicative of anything beyond the fact that there's always less of the most expensive/desirable item at any hobby gathering. |
#10
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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 20:21:13 GMT, Simple Traveler
wrote: Roland's right, you're wrong. Roland's right about what, and I'm wrong about what? He and I said very nearly the same thing. In a nutshell, the refractor is the perfect ALL around scope. That is a matter of opinion (yours apparently). I don't happen to agree. I don't really think there is such a thing as a "perfect ALL around scope". And you're wrong to boot.....the largest refractors, the newest refractors, and the coolest refractors are always at big star parties... All I said is that there are many more reflectors than refractors at all the starparties I've been at. I figure that's because when people take a lot of trouble and head for dark skies, they really want aperture- and that's something you don't get with refractors. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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