![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Orion pulled it off.
I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". From the manual, the tube is aluminum; the focuser has about the same feel as the Megrez. The 1/4-20 block is set a little too forward, best balance will be with a 2" diagonal. Or 4" rings can be used. What else do Synta and Orion have up their sleeves? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wow, that's quite an enlightment! Thanks Doug for sharing the info
with us. Now everyone seems to think the scope is made in China by Synta. Did the box or a "sticker" on the scope gave you some evidence of this (or at least "Made in China")? Thanks, Ron B[ee] -------------- "Doug Peterson" wrote in message om... Orion pulled it off. I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". From the manual, the tube is aluminum; the focuser has about the same feel as the Megrez. The 1/4-20 block is set a little too forward, best balance will be with a 2" diagonal. Or 4" rings can be used. What else do Synta and Orion have up their sleeves? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wow, that's quite an enlightment! Thanks Doug for sharing the info
with us. Now everyone seems to think the scope is made in China by Synta. Did the box or a "sticker" on the scope gave you some evidence of this (or at least "Made in China")? Thanks, Ron B[ee] -------------- "Doug Peterson" wrote in message om... Orion pulled it off. I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". From the manual, the tube is aluminum; the focuser has about the same feel as the Megrez. The 1/4-20 block is set a little too forward, best balance will be with a 2" diagonal. Or 4" rings can be used. What else do Synta and Orion have up their sleeves? |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Doug,
I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". You're absolutely correct that the wavefront is "more important" than the color correction. Otherwise, the lens would be limited to low/medium magnifications. If they can keep the lens quality consistent, it's a big winner at its price point. The thing that surprises me the most, is that the ED element is in the front. Just to be on the safe side, I would take care in cleaning the first surface. Thomas Back |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Doug,
I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". You're absolutely correct that the wavefront is "more important" than the color correction. Otherwise, the lens would be limited to low/medium magnifications. If they can keep the lens quality consistent, it's a big winner at its price point. The thing that surprises me the most, is that the ED element is in the front. Just to be on the safe side, I would take care in cleaning the first surface. Thomas Back |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Doug,
Please give us more reports on field test. See how much mag can you bring this scope up on moon/planets before it breaks down. How is the focuser? If you put heavy accessories behind and point the scope up, does the focuser slips? Many thanks for your initial report! you are getting me excited! Gin "Doug Peterson" wrote in message om... Orion pulled it off. I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". From the manual, the tube is aluminum; the focuser has about the same feel as the Megrez. The 1/4-20 block is set a little too forward, best balance will be with a 2" diagonal. Or 4" rings can be used. What else do Synta and Orion have up their sleeves? |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Doug,
Please give us more reports on field test. See how much mag can you bring this scope up on moon/planets before it breaks down. How is the focuser? If you put heavy accessories behind and point the scope up, does the focuser slips? Many thanks for your initial report! you are getting me excited! Gin "Doug Peterson" wrote in message om... Orion pulled it off. I was utterly suprised that the Orion has FAR LESS color than a Megrez. In fact it rivals the Takahashi FS-78. I know this because I had all three scopes on the same daytime artificial star. I would place it in the same league as the Tele Vue 76, which is somewhat more colorful that the FS-78 due to its faster F#. Hats off. More importantly, the wavefront is very good. The "correction" of spherical abberation is very good, 1/8 wave or even better, just a hint of overcorrection. The fresnel rings are pleasingly round, and the focus "snaps". From the manual, the tube is aluminum; the focuser has about the same feel as the Megrez. The 1/4-20 block is set a little too forward, best balance will be with a 2" diagonal. Or 4" rings can be used. What else do Synta and Orion have up their sleeves? |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() This sounds very encouraging. Now, does it have any field stops cutting into the light cone? ![]() -Rich The baffles are nothing fancy like TMBs', however they do NOT cut into the light cone. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() This sounds very encouraging. Now, does it have any field stops cutting into the light cone? ![]() -Rich The baffles are nothing fancy like TMBs', however they do NOT cut into the light cone. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() And, AFAIK, the Megrez is a standard achromat no better than the next. No such thing as Semi-APO in any of the short FL achromatic scopes that do not use a bonified substrate. Clear skies, Pete The Megrez and Pronto seem to offer some color reduction--but it is still a case of being only semi pregnant. The planets are still green-tinged, and daytime use reveals plenty of unfocused energy around. So ED or semi-APO seem to be too strong terms to describe these modest improvements. Perhaps semi-ED. Things get more interesting with the true EDs, middle of the road correction that can be shown to display color on bright stars, but essentially corrected for planetary use. What suprised me was the Orion neatly stepped past the others into this range. I find the fluorite doublets to be the true crossover point, and the Takahashis are truly a buyers market at present. Of course the true color free APOs are still the ones to beat, and I'm sure the Chinese aren't competing in this stratospheric market anytime soon. Once you've gotten used to an FCT or Russian or American triplet, it's hard to go back! |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Sedna, space probes?, colonies? what's next? | TKalbfus | Policy | 265 | July 13th 04 12:00 AM |
Proposed Theoretical Adjustments to Project Orion | Diginomics | Policy | 4 | April 21st 04 01:25 AM |
UFO Activities from Biblical Times | Kazmer Ujvarosy | Astronomy Misc | 0 | December 25th 03 05:21 AM |
earth launched buried orion | Parallax | Technology | 0 | October 21st 03 09:10 PM |
Orion ED 80mm--in my hands | Phil Wheeler | Amateur Astronomy | 83 | August 26th 03 06:48 PM |