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#1
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![]() hi all, I'm looking for a small scope to use on the moon and planets, assuming cool down isn't a problem, has the refractor got anything to offer over the Mak-Cass? cheers gaz |
#2
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![]() "Gaz" wrote in message ups.com... hi all, I'm looking for a small scope to use on the moon and planets, assuming cool down isn't a problem, has the refractor got anything to offer over the Mak-Cass? cheers gaz No central obstruction(nice for double stars), much wider field view, able to go lower power, no collimation hassle, no cool down time, smooth images, more contrast etc... Julius |
#3
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Assuming equal optical quality, the 127 mm Mak is equivalent to an 80 mm
refractor for lunar and planetary observing. The refractor would be better suited for photography and low power/daytime use. Gaz wrote: hi all, I'm looking for a small scope to use on the moon and planets, assuming cool down isn't a problem, has the refractor got anything to offer over the Mak-Cass? cheers gaz |
#4
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![]() Tim, I didn't know that, I'd assumed I'd be losing a bit of resolving power on the planets if I choose the ED , it was the main reason i was leaning towards the Mak. Otherwise, as Szaki points out, i could have a larger FOV, skip collimation etc. Gaz |
#5
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In terms of resolving power, the equivalent refractor aperture is
roughly equal to the aperture of the Mak minus the diameter of its central obstruction. Collimation and cool down are not big issues with small aperture Maks. One advantage for the refractor I forgot to mention is less scattered light because there are no extra reflections involved, This will give slightly more contrast on planets. Gaz wrote: Tim, I didn't know that, I'd assumed I'd be losing a bit of resolving power on the planets if I choose the ED , it was the main reason i was leaning towards the Mak. Otherwise, as Szaki points out, i could have a larger FOV, skip collimation etc. Gaz |
#6
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While I agree with other posters about the optical properties of the refractor,
there are two things that you should also keep in mind. First, the Mak you mentioned is capable of over 2.5x the magnification of the refractor you mentioned due to its focal length, not a trivial consideration when it comes to the Moon and planets, where magnification is as important as clarity of view. Second, the Mak will have less color dispersion, giving cleaner images than the refractor - no blue fringes on planet or Moon images. And I know of three of those Orion Maks, one I own, and they've all performed better than an equivalent sized Mak and according to one guy I trust, better than an 8-inch SCT. While a well-made Mak will not outperform a well-made refractor, the refractor you mentioned is a two element one with a relatively short focal ratio of f/7.5, and making a good one takes more effort than the Mak, so you're chances of getting a good Mak is better than the refractor, in my opinion, given what I've experienced. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Gaz" wrote in message ups.com... hi all, I'm looking for a small scope to use on the moon and planets, assuming cool down isn't a problem, has the refractor got anything to offer over the Mak-Cass? cheers gaz |
#7
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![]() "David Nakamoto" wrote in message news:wqQKd.403$zb.85@trnddc07... While I agree with other posters about the optical properties of the refractor, there are two things that you should also keep in mind. First, the Mak you mentioned is capable of over 2.5x the magnification of the refractor you mentioned due to its focal length, That's a bull! Orion 80ED should do 250x or more any day, so 2.5x the Mak127 magnificatain, as you suggesting, would put it over 600x. Never happened!Hahahaha! I owned 6" Intes-Mak-Cass, much finer and more expensive OTA than the Orion 127 Mak, but it had to have excelent seeing to perform. My 3" f/15 Edscorp refractor regularly out perfomed the 6" Mak when the seeing was not there. Mak has a larger central obstruction (37%) than an SCT has, so one has to deal with large, multable diffrection rings around stars or the moons of Jupiter. Person who used to refractor images, would puke. Julius |
#8
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Szaki, you're thoughtless in your answers, as simple math will show.
We're talking about an f/7.5 system in the 80ED, which you would have known if you took the time to visit the Orion website, and thought anything about giving correct answers instead of "showing off", and doing research before writing anything down. This means the focal length is 600mm. Since "focal length of telescope" / "magnification" = "focal length eyepiece", 600 / 250 = 2.4 mm. Even if such an eyepiece exists, it also means you're pushing 80x per inch aperture in a two element 80 mm telescope, only possible with the best optics (which the Orion is not), long telescope focal ratios, and under absolutely steady nights. And your comparison is not correct either. You're comparing a 3-inch f/15 refractor to a 3-inch f/7.5 refractor (the Orion ED). No matter what you do, you cannot achieve as much magnification through the same eyepieces from the latter as through the former. As anyone who knows optics knows, figuring and testing long focal ratio systems is easier than short focal ratio systems (steepness of curves as well as tighter requirements on the figure of the curves for the short focal ratio systems are two reasons). I have no doubt that a 3-inch f/15 refractor, if properly made would outperform a similarly sized Mak (127 mm aperture and f/12 focal ratio) but we're not comparing such a Mak to an f/15 instrument, but a much shorter focal ratio instrument. Color dispersion is greater in such systems and affects performance, while the Mak is more immune to such effects. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Szaki" wrote in message ... "David Nakamoto" wrote in message news:wqQKd.403$zb.85@trnddc07... While I agree with other posters about the optical properties of the refractor, there are two things that you should also keep in mind. First, the Mak you mentioned is capable of over 2.5x the magnification of the refractor you mentioned due to its focal length, That's a bull! Orion 80ED should do 250x or more any day, so 2.5x the Mak127 magnificatain, as you suggesting, would put it over 600x. Never happened!Hahahaha! I owned 6" Intes-Mak-Cass, much finer and more expensive OTA than the Orion 127 Mak, but it had to have excelent seeing to perform. My 3" f/15 Edscorp refractor regularly out perfomed the 6" Mak when the seeing was not there. Mak has a larger central obstruction (37%) than an SCT has, so one has to deal with large, multable diffrection rings around stars or the moons of Jupiter. Person who used to refractor images, would puke. Julius |
#9
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I'm a user not a builder of telescopes. Good quality APO refractor, one can
push over 100x per inch on a good seeing night, compound telescopes like the Mak, lucky if you can do 50X. I'm getting tired of arguing with Newt,Mak, SCT guys about this, cause I know they put down refractors for the price/aperture.. What I'm telling you is from experience, not from theory. I owned all those scopes, but I don't give up my refractor. After owning many telescopes, I settled to C102F APO refractor (most used), 4" Mak( MTO-11CA 10/1000 Telephoto Lens) for portability and a Ultima C-11 OTA for DSO's. They all fit on my EQ mount or the GiroII for alt/az movement. All these telescopes are very portable and easy to store, I know the pros and cons of these scopes also. My 4" Mak don't even come close to my TV Pronto I use to own. I heard good things about the Orion80ED. One has to use barlows for short focus length refractors, to get higher magnification, that's all. I hate to use a Mak for terrestrially, long focus length, narrow field. Yak!!!! JS "David Nakamoto" wrote in message news:i6UKd.1078$UB6.973@trnddc01... Szaki, you're thoughtless in your answers, as simple math will show. We're talking about an f/7.5 system in the 80ED, which you would have known if you took the time to visit the Orion website, and thought anything about giving correct answers instead of "showing off", and doing research before writing anything down. This means the focal length is 600mm. Since "focal length of telescope" / "magnification" = "focal length eyepiece", 600 / 250 = 2.4 mm. Even if such an eyepiece exists, it also means you're pushing 80x per inch aperture in a two element 80 mm telescope, only possible with the best optics (which the Orion is not), long telescope focal ratios, and under absolutely steady nights. And your comparison is not correct either. You're comparing a 3-inch f/15 refractor to a 3-inch f/7.5 refractor (the Orion ED). No matter what you do, you cannot achieve as much magnification through the same eyepieces from the latter as through the former. As anyone who knows optics knows, figuring and testing long focal ratio systems is easier than short focal ratio systems (steepness of curves as well as tighter requirements on the figure of the curves for the short focal ratio systems are two reasons). I have no doubt that a 3-inch f/15 refractor, if properly made would outperform a similarly sized Mak (127 mm aperture and f/12 focal ratio) but we're not comparing such a Mak to an f/15 instrument, but a much shorter focal ratio instrument. Color dispersion is greater in such systems and affects performance, while the Mak is more immune to such effects. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Szaki" wrote in message ... "David Nakamoto" wrote in message news:wqQKd.403$zb.85@trnddc07... While I agree with other posters about the optical properties of the refractor, there are two things that you should also keep in mind. First, the Mak you mentioned is capable of over 2.5x the magnification of the refractor you mentioned due to its focal length, That's a bull! Orion 80ED should do 250x or more any day, so 2.5x the Mak127 magnificatain, as you suggesting, would put it over 600x. Never happened!Hahahaha! I owned 6" Intes-Mak-Cass, much finer and more expensive OTA than the Orion 127 Mak, but it had to have excelent seeing to perform. My 3" f/15 Edscorp refractor regularly out perfomed the 6" Mak when the seeing was not there. Mak has a larger central obstruction (37%) than an SCT has, so one has to deal with large, multable diffrection rings around stars or the moons of Jupiter. Person who used to refractor images, would puke. Julius |
#10
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"Szaki" wrote in message
news ![]() I'm a user not a builder of telescopes. Good quality APO refractor, one can push over 100x per inch on a good seeing night, compound telescopes like the Mak, lucky if you can do 50X. I'm getting tired of arguing with Newt,Mak, SCT guys about this, cause I know they put down refractors for the price/aperture.. What I'm telling you is from experience, not from theory. Same here. Obviously you're not reading my message carefully enough. I pointed out legitimate and KNOWN deficiencies in relatively short focal ratio inexpensive two-element refractors, while acknowledging the benefits that others have pointed out. And what you call theory is the collective wisdom of many decades of visual amateur astronomer experience from a lot of people on this newsgroup. You obviously have a strong and I must say skewed bias toward refractors, without taking into account the differences in performance brought about by such things as focal ratio, two vs. three-element design, et al. And I own a short focal ratio refractor, so I know something from personal experience, if you're going to tout that out as your badge of authority. And one thing I would not do, which you do, is to think that a refractor is a refractor is a refractor. Focal ratio and objective design DOES MATTER, but I doubt you understand this, given your responses to my messages. Whatever experience you think you have, it's clear to me you need a lot more before you can make cogent and fact-backed statements. That, and read the messages your responding to more carefully. I owned all those scopes, but I don't give up my refractor. After owning many telescopes, I settled to C102F APO refractor (most used), 4" Mak( MTO-11CA 10/1000 Telephoto Lens) for portability and a Ultima C-11 OTA for DSO's. They all fit on my EQ mount or the GiroII for alt/az movement. All these telescopes are very portable and easy to store, I know the pros and cons of these scopes also. My 4" Mak don't even come close to my TV Pronto I use to own. I heard good things about the Orion80ED. So have I, but the fact remains that those reports I've gotten from observers who I know to have lots of experience evaluating telescopes of various designs and makes have said it was good for a two-element short focal length refractor, meaning it will perform within the expectations of such a telescope, and NOT like a longer focal ratio one, or a three-element one, or an expensive one, et al. One has to use barlows for short focus length refractors, to get higher magnification, that's all. I hate to use a Mak for terrestrially, long focus length, narrow field. Yak!!!! But the Mak will deliver 2.4 times the magnification for the same eyepiece, so it is also capable of delivering higher magnification, important for planetary viewing. And in any case, I don't think that, given what I've heard and seen of the Orion 80ED at star parties, that you can push it much past 30x per inch of aperture, so your objection that this is the "limit" on the Mak (something I also disagree on, from collective experience) is moot. And the original poster asked specifically for planets and the Moon. Why drag terrestrial viewing when it was not specified? In this case, the Mak is an instrument he should consider, given that for a given eyepiece it will deliver more magnification, less color dispersion, and potentially sharper views, if the contrast isn't too bad. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "David Nakamoto" wrote in message news:i6UKd.1078$UB6.973@trnddc01... Szaki, you're thoughtless in your answers, as simple math will show. We're talking about an f/7.5 system in the 80ED, which you would have known if you took the time to visit the Orion website, and thought anything about giving correct answers instead of "showing off", and doing research before writing anything down. This means the focal length is 600mm. Since "focal length of telescope" / "magnification" = "focal length eyepiece", 600 / 250 = 2.4 mm. Even if such an eyepiece exists, it also means you're pushing 80x per inch aperture in a two element 80 mm telescope, only possible with the best optics (which the Orion is not), long telescope focal ratios, and under absolutely steady nights. And your comparison is not correct either. You're comparing a 3-inch f/15 refractor to a 3-inch f/7.5 refractor (the Orion ED). No matter what you do, you cannot achieve as much magnification through the same eyepieces from the latter as through the former. As anyone who knows optics knows, figuring and testing long focal ratio systems is easier than short focal ratio systems (steepness of curves as well as tighter requirements on the figure of the curves for the short focal ratio systems are two reasons). I have no doubt that a 3-inch f/15 refractor, if properly made would outperform a similarly sized Mak (127 mm aperture and f/12 focal ratio) but we're not comparing such a Mak to an f/15 instrument, but a much shorter focal ratio instrument. Color dispersion is greater in such systems and affects performance, while the Mak is more immune to such effects. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Szaki" wrote in message ... "David Nakamoto" wrote in message news:wqQKd.403$zb.85@trnddc07... While I agree with other posters about the optical properties of the refractor, there are two things that you should also keep in mind. First, the Mak you mentioned is capable of over 2.5x the magnification of the refractor you mentioned due to its focal length, That's a bull! Orion 80ED should do 250x or more any day, so 2.5x the Mak127 magnificatain, as you suggesting, would put it over 600x. Never happened!Hahahaha! I owned 6" Intes-Mak-Cass, much finer and more expensive OTA than the Orion 127 Mak, but it had to have excelent seeing to perform. My 3" f/15 Edscorp refractor regularly out perfomed the 6" Mak when the seeing was not there. Mak has a larger central obstruction (37%) than an SCT has, so one has to deal with large, multable diffrection rings around stars or the moons of Jupiter. Person who used to refractor images, would puke. Julius |
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