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This is an intriguing little scope, has anyone tried it? Whats the inside
scoop from the solar observing world? Do I need one? Ed T. |
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"Edward" wrote in message k.net...
This is an intriguing little scope, has anyone tried it? Whats the inside scoop from the solar observing world? Do I need one? Yes, considering it's less expensive than a "holy hand grenade". |
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"Edward" wrote in message k.net...
This is an intriguing little scope, has anyone tried it? Whats the inside scoop from the solar observing world? Do I need one? Yes, considering it's less expensive than a "holy hand grenade". |
#4
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I posted this earlier in the week.
At the Astrofest exhibition in London yesterday I was able to very quickly compare 4 solar telescopes. I am by no means a solar expert (and have no connection with any of the manufacturers mentioned), but have looked through a couple of HA scopes before albeit briefly on each occasion. Yesterday at about 10:30 am the somewhat hazy, low sun over London was at an altitude of 19 deg and the views were over the centre of the capital, so I will assume that conditions were not that good. I had about 1 minute looking through each scope - so what follows is a definitely a first impression. At the top end was the Coronado Maxscope 90mm dedicated solar scope. The solar disk views and prominence detail through the attached binoviewer were simply superb, as you could expect from a scope that (according to the demonstrator) costs £12,000+ (!) in the UK. A little bit more affordable were the Solarview 50mm dedicated HA scope (£3,000) and a Solarview 50mm filter attached to a TV pronto (?). These acquitted themselves very well against the big Coranado with excellent views, not too far short of the scope costing 4x as much; the pronto gave slightly better views than the dedicated scope IMHO. This is all very esoteric stuff for most of us mortals and comprehensive reviews appear elsewhere but since the adverts for the Coronado PST appeared with a price of £500 I started to think seriously about getting an HA scope. So what's the PST like - in short (and estimating hugely 8-)) the solar disk details are 40% as good as the Solarview scopes I could compare it against, and the prominences are 90% as good. Granulation in the expensive scopes was clear and well defined, in the PST the same granulation was visible but at reduced contrast. Sun spots and plages were similarly not as contrasty. The most obvious deficiency in the PST's view was that the filaments that were clear in the expensive scopes were on the threshold of vision in the PST. On the other hand solar prominences showed up very well, with only a small difference between all 4 scopes. Overall, not bad in my opinion though not the scope for a solar specialist, and I think the views are definitely worth the price in comparison to the more expensive scopes. Now, just how much credit is left on my Visa card? Adam -- Eschew obfuscation. Eliminate such idiom previous to rejoining. "Edward" wrote in message ..net... This is an intriguing little scope, has anyone tried it? Whats the inside scoop from the solar observing world? Do I need one? Ed T. |
#5
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I posted this earlier in the week.
At the Astrofest exhibition in London yesterday I was able to very quickly compare 4 solar telescopes. I am by no means a solar expert (and have no connection with any of the manufacturers mentioned), but have looked through a couple of HA scopes before albeit briefly on each occasion. Yesterday at about 10:30 am the somewhat hazy, low sun over London was at an altitude of 19 deg and the views were over the centre of the capital, so I will assume that conditions were not that good. I had about 1 minute looking through each scope - so what follows is a definitely a first impression. At the top end was the Coronado Maxscope 90mm dedicated solar scope. The solar disk views and prominence detail through the attached binoviewer were simply superb, as you could expect from a scope that (according to the demonstrator) costs £12,000+ (!) in the UK. A little bit more affordable were the Solarview 50mm dedicated HA scope (£3,000) and a Solarview 50mm filter attached to a TV pronto (?). These acquitted themselves very well against the big Coranado with excellent views, not too far short of the scope costing 4x as much; the pronto gave slightly better views than the dedicated scope IMHO. This is all very esoteric stuff for most of us mortals and comprehensive reviews appear elsewhere but since the adverts for the Coronado PST appeared with a price of £500 I started to think seriously about getting an HA scope. So what's the PST like - in short (and estimating hugely 8-)) the solar disk details are 40% as good as the Solarview scopes I could compare it against, and the prominences are 90% as good. Granulation in the expensive scopes was clear and well defined, in the PST the same granulation was visible but at reduced contrast. Sun spots and plages were similarly not as contrasty. The most obvious deficiency in the PST's view was that the filaments that were clear in the expensive scopes were on the threshold of vision in the PST. On the other hand solar prominences showed up very well, with only a small difference between all 4 scopes. Overall, not bad in my opinion though not the scope for a solar specialist, and I think the views are definitely worth the price in comparison to the more expensive scopes. Now, just how much credit is left on my Visa card? Adam -- Eschew obfuscation. Eliminate such idiom previous to rejoining. "Edward" wrote in message ..net... This is an intriguing little scope, has anyone tried it? Whats the inside scoop from the solar observing world? Do I need one? Ed T. |
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