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My local telescope store says that you can't put a camera with a T-mount
on most reflector telescopes because "you can't get the camera close enough." Well, take a look at a typical T-adapter for a 1.25 eyepiece tube: http://www.telescopes.com/telescope-...sal114inch.cfm It has a thick portion designed to keep the camera about an inch further away from the telescope than it would otherwise be. It seems to me that this is a problem easily solved, if someone made a T- adapter without the thick portion. Is there a reason for this? What am I missing? I know I could put a camera on a Cassegrain telescope, but the Newtonians have much lower f-numbers. -- Please reply to: | "We establish no religion in this country, we pciszek at panix dot com | command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor Autoreply is disabled | will we ever. Church and state are, and must | remain, separate." --Ronald Reagan, 10/26/1984 |
#2
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On Feb 19, 4:26*am, (Paul Ciszek) wrote:
My local telescope store says that you can't put a camera with a T-mount on most reflector telescopes because "you can't get the camera close enough." Did your local telescope store tell you that you can modify the (Newtonian) reflector by either replacing the focuser with one of low profile and/or moving the primary mirror cell forward? This is advertised as working with a small-chip CCD camera: http://www.telescope.com/Telescopes/.../19/p/9974.uts |
#3
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Paul Ciszek:
My local telescope store says that you can't put a camera with a T-mount on most reflector telescopes because "you can't get the camera close enough." Well, take a look at a typical T-adapter for a 1.25 eyepiece tube: http://www.telescopes.com/telescope-...estrontadapter universal114inch.cfm It has a thick portion designed to keep the camera about an inch further away from the telescope than it would otherwise be. It seems to me that this is a problem easily solved, if someone made a T- adapter without the thick portion. Is there a reason for this? What am I missing? I know I could put a camera on a Cassegrain telescope, but the Newtonians have much lower f-numbers. The Takahashi Epsilon 180ED, a fast Ÿ2.78 Newtonian astrograph, has very little back-focus. I have two threaded barrels for mine. The standard barrel mounts an SBIG camera with an internal filter wheel (i.e., no protrusions on the camera body) or a DSLR. The short barrel mounts my SBIG with an external eight-position filter wheel. There is no provision for focal reducers or extenders; such things are not applicable to this telescope. -- I agree with almost everything that you have said and almost everything that you will say in your entire life. usenet *at* davidillig dawt cawm |
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#5
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On Feb 19, 4:26*am, (Paul Ciszek) wrote:
My local telescope store says that you can't put a camera with a T-mount on most reflector telescopes because "you can't get the camera close enough." *Well, take a look at a typical T-adapter for a 1.25 eyepiece tube: http://www.telescopes.com/telescope-...aphic/celestro... It has a thick portion designed to keep the camera about an inch further away from the telescope than it would otherwise be. *It seems to me that this is a problem easily solved, if someone made a T- adapter without the thick portion. *Is there a reason for this? What am I missing? I know I could put a camera on a Cassegrain telescope, but the Newtonians have much lower f-numbers. -- Please reply to: * * * * | "We establish no religion in this country, we pciszek at panix dot com | *command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor Autoreply is disabled * *| *will we ever. *Church and state are, and must * * * * * * * * * * * * *| *remain, separate." --Ronald Reagan, 10/26/1984 Shift mirror up the tube, use an eyepiece extension tube for visual use. Simple. |
#6
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#7
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On 19/02/2013 09:26, Paul Ciszek wrote:
My local telescope store says that you can't put a camera with a T-mount on most reflector telescopes because "you can't get the camera close enough." Well, take a look at a typical T-adapter for a 1.25 eyepiece tube: http://www.telescopes.com/telescope-...sal114inch.cfm It has a thick portion designed to keep the camera about an inch further away from the telescope than it would otherwise be. It seems to me that this is a problem easily solved, if someone made a T- adapter without the thick portion. Is there a reason for this?v Usually to avoid bits of the camera that stick out like the pentaprism hitting the focus wheel. What am I missing? Normally the focal plane of the scope is somewhere inside the draw tube and so it doesn't matter how close you could mount the camera. You can test this with some tracing paper. If you can get a focussed image of the moon on tracing paper about 40mm behind the drawtube exit then you are in luck. Most Newtonians used for photography have either a low profile focuser that swaps for the eyepiece unit or have tweaked the mirror to be further up the tube with slight vignetting as a result. I know I could put a camera on a Cassegrain telescope, but the Newtonians have much lower f-numbers. It is a lot easier on an SCT there is huge backfocus - enough to alter the nominal magnification of matched telephoto multipliers. Regards, Martin Brown |
#8
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![]() In article , Tinech wrote: Do you have any pics of your telescope? Just share it My intention is to eventually select a telescope based on its ability to accomodate my camera, sans lens (non of the afocal nonsense). It seems that Orion sells some Newtonians intended for astrophotography, but I need to make sure that they are intended for lensless cameras. -- Please reply to: | "We establish no religion in this country, we pciszek at panix dot com | command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor Autoreply is disabled | will we ever. Church and state are, and must | remain, separate." --Ronald Reagan, 10/26/1984 |
#9
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![]() In article , Tinech wrote: Do you have any pics of your telescope? Just share it Oh, and it would also be cool to be able to attach my camera to other people's telescopes with a minimum of fuss. -- Please reply to: | "We establish no religion in this country, we pciszek at panix dot com | command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor Autoreply is disabled | will we ever. Church and state are, and must | remain, separate." --Ronald Reagan, 10/26/1984 |
#10
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On Feb 22, 6:24*pm, (Paul Ciszek) wrote:
In article , Tinech wrote: Do you have any pics of your telescope? Just share it My intention is to eventually select a telescope based on its ability to accomodate my camera, sans lens (non of the afocal nonsense). *It seems that Orion sells some Newtonians intended for astrophotography, but I need to make sure that they are intended for lensless cameras. and also wrote later: Oh, and it would also be cool to be able to attach my camera to other people's telescopes with a minimum of fuss. Yes that would be cool. However, even if you could find a "T-adapter without unnecessary wide part" there still is no guarantee that your rig would work on any particular Newt (or refractor) that had not already been designed or modified for "prime focus" photography. I do seem to recall mentioning earlier in this thread a product that might solve your problem. You should contact them for the exact specs and technical details of their product. |
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