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Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 19th 03, 11:21 PM
Nikos Aslanakis
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

My wife gave me as a present a "do not ever by this!" department store
70/700 scope wich came with 2 eyepieces, a Kellner 4mm an a SR 20mm.

The 4mm gave 175x which was over the recommended (140x) magnification
for the scope.

It realy hooked me into astronomy so I decided to buy a 11mm Televue
Plossl eypiece witch was a big improvement and today I bougth a
Celestron Ultima Barlow 2x.

The 11mm TV gave me 64x so with the barlow I shoud get 128x which
should be just fine for the apperture.

BUT when I try the 11mm TV with the Barlow on Mars I get a BIGGER
planetary disk than with the 4mm eyepiece. I can tell this because
with my other eye I can compare the planet to the holes on the tripod.
And yes I put the barlow after the diagonal.

What happens here? I suppose 175x is bigger than 128x. Is this right?
What am I missing?
  #2  
Old September 19th 03, 11:26 PM
Tdcarls
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

The 4mm would have very little eye relief as opposed to the 11mm TV.

It could just be a matter of perception caused by the greater amount of eye
relief.

Just a thought...
Todd

http://www.backyardastronomy.com
http://www.skynewsmagazine.com
http://www.simpleastrophotography.com

  #3  
Old September 20th 03, 01:03 AM
CeeBee
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

(Nikos Aslanakis) wrote in sci.astro.amateur:

My wife gave me as a present a "do not ever by this!" department store
70/700 scope wich came with 2 eyepieces, a Kellner 4mm an a SR 20mm.

The 4mm gave 175x which was over the recommended (140x) magnification
for the scope.

It realy hooked me into astronomy so I decided to buy a 11mm Televue
Plossl eypiece witch was a big improvement and today I bougth a
Celestron Ultima Barlow 2x.

The 11mm TV gave me 64x so with the barlow I shoud get 128x which
should be just fine for the apperture.

BUT when I try the 11mm TV with the Barlow on Mars I get a BIGGER
planetary disk than with the 4mm eyepiece. I can tell this because
with my other eye I can compare the planet to the holes on the tripod.
And yes I put the barlow after the diagonal.

What happens here? I suppose 175x is bigger than 128x. Is this right?
What am I missing?


If the description on the eyepieces and on the barlow as well is
correct, and your scope is f 700mm the magnification with a 2x barlow
indeed is 700/5.5 as opposed to 700/4.

If you are absolutely certain that this is no visual effect, and not due
to a smaller FOV of the Plossl (maybe 60 deg versus 50 degrees), there's
only one conclusion left: the labels on the eyepieces are wrong. Maybe
the 4mm Kellner is a low end "department store accessory" and in the
Chinese factury they switched the plastic label - after all, probably no
one there could reach that latin-symbol gibberish..... :P

--
CeeBee


Uxbridge: "By God, sir, I've lost my leg!"
Wellington: "By God, sir, so you have!"


Google CeeBee @
www.geocities.com/ceebee_2

  #4  
Old September 20th 03, 01:12 AM
Bill Becker
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?


"Nikos Aslanakis" wrote in message
m...
My wife gave me as a present a "do not ever by this!" department store
70/700 scope wich came with 2 eyepieces, a Kellner 4mm an a SR 20mm.

The 4mm gave 175x which was over the recommended (140x) magnification
for the scope.

It realy hooked me into astronomy so I decided to buy a 11mm Televue
Plossl eypiece witch was a big improvement and today I bougth a
Celestron Ultima Barlow 2x.

The 11mm TV gave me 64x so with the barlow I shoud get 128x which
should be just fine for the apperture.

BUT when I try the 11mm TV with the Barlow on Mars I get a BIGGER
planetary disk than with the 4mm eyepiece. I can tell this because
with my other eye I can compare the planet to the holes on the tripod.
And yes I put the barlow after the diagonal.

What happens here? I suppose 175x is bigger than 128x. Is this right?
What am I missing?


Hi Nikos,

Are you sure it isn't the other way around.....4mm SR and 20mm Kellner?

Best regards,
Bill


  #5  
Old September 20th 03, 02:23 AM
Michael A. Covington
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?


"Nikos Aslanakis" wrote in message
m...
My wife gave me as a present a "do not ever by this!" department store
70/700 scope wich came with 2 eyepieces, a Kellner 4mm an a SR 20mm.

The 4mm gave 175x which was over the recommended (140x) magnification
for the scope.

It realy hooked me into astronomy so I decided to buy a 11mm Televue
Plossl eypiece witch was a big improvement and today I bougth a
Celestron Ultima Barlow 2x.

The 11mm TV gave me 64x so with the barlow I shoud get 128x which
should be just fine for the apperture.

BUT when I try the 11mm TV with the Barlow on Mars I get a BIGGER
planetary disk than with the 4mm eyepiece. I can tell this because
with my other eye I can compare the planet to the holes on the tripod.
And yes I put the barlow after the diagonal.

What happens here? I suppose 175x is bigger than 128x. Is this right?
What am I missing?


I wonder if your 4mm eyepiece is really 4mm. Maybe you're lucky and it's
really 6mm


  #6  
Old September 20th 03, 03:14 AM
Stephen Paul
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

More than one person has claimed that the Ultima 2X barlow is in fact 2.5x.


I get larger images with the Ultima than I do with a 2.5x Powermate.


  #7  
Old September 20th 03, 05:37 AM
Jon Isaacs
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

More than one person has claimed that the Ultima 2X barlow is in fact 2.5x.


I get larger images with the Ultima than I do with a 2.5x Powermate.


I have seen this suggested other times.

One thing to consider is that the magnification of a barlow is not fixed,
rather it depends on some geometric factors. The fact that putting the barlow
in front of the diagonal (nice trick on a Newt) is said to give 3X
magnification is only an approximation.

I think Stephen Paul is on the right track here.

jon
  #9  
Old September 20th 03, 08:28 PM
Nikos Aslanakis
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

Well, almost all of you are right in one way or another.. ;-)

I have made some test today and here are the results:

I put in the 20m eyepiece looking on a nice external air conditioning
unit some hundreds of meters away. Looking down with one eye on the
eyepiece and the other to the floor, I marked where the projection of
the air condition on the floor started and where it ended. Now I had
35x.

Then I put the barlow with the same eyepiece and noted the projection
which was now almost double. Good thing. At least my Barlow was a 2x
one ;-) I marked the projection limits now at 70x.

Then I put the 11mm Televue eyepiece. The projection was somewhat
smaller which was ok at 64x. I put the barlow on and it normally
doubled. That was 128x.

At last I put the "4"mm eyepiece and guess what!!: the projection was
smaller at about 80% of the 128x one!!

So the "4mm" eyepiece is not a 4mm but something from 6mm to 7.5mm.
They have a wrong label on it saying "K 4mm".

Tomorrow I will do the same tests with greater accuracy to calculate
the exact mm of the eyepiece.

Thank you all for your help anyway!
  #10  
Old September 23rd 03, 07:35 AM
Nikos Aslanakis
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Default Celestron Ultima 2x Barlow: Can you explain this?

Well, after careful calculations here are the results:

The Celestron Ultima Barlow magnifies by a factor of 2.2x with all
eyepieces.

And, of course, the "4mm" eyepiece is not a 4mm but a 6.5mm one,
giving 108x on my scope.

I guess it is still a kellner. It wouldn't bother me if it was a
Radian though...
 




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