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I have donated my Takahashi TOA-150, my Astro-Physics 1200GTO CP4, and
my SBIG STL1100M camera http://www.primordial-light.com/observatory.html#twoscopes to my club, The Howard Astro League https://www.howardastro.org. Keeping, I am, my Takahashi FSQ-106ED. I've just put it on a new Bisque Paramount MYT and I have a newish Starlight Xpress Trius SX-36 monochrome camera with a Maxi Filter Wheel with an SX Lodestar guide camera on the OAG. Photo at https://www.flickr.com/photos/primeval though the camera is not yet installed for lack of one lousy adapter, which arrived late this afternoon. I did a rough polar alignment using a technique described by my friend Richard Wright at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9pLz1bzV_A. That was good enough for goto targets to be well inside the field of a 15mm eyepiece. Software Bisque's TheSkyX Professional, running on a MacBook Pro, controls everything. After I've familiarized myself with the new setup I'll give my Raspberry Pi, also running TSX Pro, a try. My iPad Pro running Bisque's TheSky HD can also control the equipment. There is a punch list to be addressed, mainly concerned with wire dress. The A-P 1200GTO CP4/Takahashi combination was really superb, *except* for the fact that it didn't leave much room for me under my tiny 2-meter Observa-Dome. It will be much more comfortable under Howard Astro's 15-foot dome! It is my hope that doing narrowband photography with a faster 'scope will save astrophotography for me under worsening Mid-Atlantic skies. The FSQ is a 530mm 5 'scope, 387mm 3.7 with a Reducer QE. ] -- 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 |
#2
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On Friday, May 25, 2018 at 7:32:32 PM UTC-5, Davoud wrote:
I have donated my Takahashi TOA-150, my Astro-Physics 1200GTO CP4, and my SBIG STL1100M camera http://www.primordial-light.com/observatory.html#twoscopes to my club, The Howard Astro League https://www.howardastro.org. Keeping, I am, my Takahashi FSQ-106ED. I've just put it on a new Bisque Paramount MYT and I have a newish Starlight Xpress Trius SX-36 monochrome camera with a Maxi Filter Wheel with an SX Lodestar guide camera on the OAG. Photo at https://www.flickr.com/photos/primeval ő though the camera is not yet installed for lack of one lousy adapter, which arrived late this afternoon. I did a rough polar alignment using a technique described by my friend Richard Wright at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9pLz1bzV_A. That was good enough for goto targets to be well inside the field of a 15mm eyepiece. Software Bisque's TheSkyX Professional, running on a MacBook Pro, controls everything. After I've familiarized myself with the new setup I'll give my Raspberry Pi, also running TSX Pro, a try. My iPad Pro running Bisque's TheSky HD can also control the equipment. There is a punch list to be addressed, mainly concerned with wire dress. The A-P 1200GTO CP4/Takahashi combination was really superb, *except* for the fact that it didn't leave much room for me under my tiny 2-meter Observa-Dome. It will be much more comfortable under Howard Astro's 15-foot dome! It is my hope that doing narrowband photography with a faster 'scope will save astrophotography for me under worsening Mid-Atlantic skies. The FSQ is a 530mm č5 'scope, 387mm č3.7 with a Reducer QE. ] -- 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 Sounds like a great new setup, and you'll have lots of fun with it. Keep us in the loop when you get some images. Razzy |
#3
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On Saturday, 26 May 2018 02:32:32 UTC+2, Davoud wrote:
I have donated my Takahashi TOA-150, my Astro-Physics 1200GTO CP4, and my SBIG STL1100M camera http://www.primordial-light.com/observatory.html#twoscopes to my club, The Howard Astro League https://www.howardastro.org. Keeping, I am, my Takahashi FSQ-106ED. I've just put it on a new Bisque Paramount MYT and I have a newish Starlight Xpress Trius SX-36 monochrome camera with a Maxi Filter Wheel with an SX Lodestar guide camera on the OAG. Photo at https://www.flickr.com/photos/primeval ő though the camera is not yet installed for lack of one lousy adapter, which arrived late this afternoon. I did a rough polar alignment using a technique described by my friend Richard Wright at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9pLz1bzV_A. That was good enough for goto targets to be well inside the field of a 15mm eyepiece. Software Bisque's TheSkyX Professional, running on a MacBook Pro, controls everything. After I've familiarized myself with the new setup I'll give my Raspberry Pi, also running TSX Pro, a try. My iPad Pro running Bisque's TheSky HD can also control the equipment. There is a punch list to be addressed, mainly concerned with wire dress. The A-P 1200GTO CP4/Takahashi combination was really superb, *except* for the fact that it didn't leave much room for me under my tiny 2-meter Observa-Dome. It will be much more comfortable under Howard Astro's 15-foot dome! It is my hope that doing narrowband photography with a faster 'scope will save astrophotography for me under worsening Mid-Atlantic skies. The FSQ is a 530mm č5 'scope, 387mm č3.7 with a Reducer QE. ] -- 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 Your generosity should not go unnoticed. And certainly not here. May your rewards be the further enjoyment of your hobby with your new equipment. And the brave new challenges they bring with slightly more elbow room.. The journey is always the thing. The goals achieved but fleeting moments of intense personal pleasure on the path of life. To spur one forever onwards to the next exciting hurdle to be overcome. To have sold your fine equipment might have brought pleasure to one or two others. Your generous gift must surely inspire many others to exceed their personal boundaries. To help advance the largely untapped potential of man. Congratulations on your act of kindness to humanity. And for your undoubted wisdom and charity. Would that all men could be so fairly judged in this life! Best regards Chris.B |
#4
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On Friday, 25 May 2018 20:32:32 UTC-4, Davoud wrote:
I have donated my Takahashi TOA-150, my Astro-Physics 1200GTO CP4, and my SBIG STL1100M camera http://www.primordial-light.com/observatory.html#twoscopes to my club, The Howard Astro League https://www.howardastro.org. Keeping, I am, my Takahashi FSQ-106ED. I've just put it on a new Bisque Paramount MYT and I have a newish Starlight Xpress Trius SX-36 monochrome camera with a Maxi Filter Wheel with an SX Lodestar guide camera on the OAG. Photo at https://www.flickr.com/photos/primeval ő though the camera is not yet installed for lack of one lousy adapter, which arrived late this afternoon. I did a rough polar alignment using a technique described by my friend Richard Wright at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9pLz1bzV_A. That was good enough for goto targets to be well inside the field of a 15mm eyepiece. Software Bisque's TheSkyX Professional, running on a MacBook Pro, controls everything. After I've familiarized myself with the new setup I'll give my Raspberry Pi, also running TSX Pro, a try. My iPad Pro running Bisque's TheSky HD can also control the equipment. There is a punch list to be addressed, mainly concerned with wire dress. The A-P 1200GTO CP4/Takahashi combination was really superb, *except* for the fact that it didn't leave much room for me under my tiny 2-meter Observa-Dome. It will be much more comfortable under Howard Astro's 15-foot dome! It is my hope that doing narrowband photography with a faster 'scope will save astrophotography for me under worsening Mid-Atlantic skies. The FSQ is a 530mm č5 'scope, 387mm č3.7 with a Reducer QE. ] -- 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 Your impressive system is still within the realm of what you might call, "magnified image astrophotography." But I can't help wondering whatever happened to the days when people used large aperture, narrow-angle scopes to image individual objects instead of wide-angle swaths of the sky? I remember die-hards using Questars (uncompressed) for 2.5-3 HOUR exposures with film and they had to be hand-guided. The worst aspect of the "wide-angle disease" is in photography in-general. Mediocre photographers now use cheap ultra-wide angle lenses to try to inject some dynamics into what are mostly dull landscapes. "Astrophotographers" take 20mm lens shots of the Milky Way, and we have to suffer through reams of them on photography groups. You've seen one, you've pretty much seen them all. |
#5
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Davoud:
...Photo at https://www.flickr.com/photos/primeval though the camera is not yet installed for lack of one lousy adapter, which arrived late this afternoon. RichA: Your impressive system is still within the realm of what you might call, "magnified image astrophotography." "Astrophotographers" take 20mm lens shots of the Milky Way, and we have to suffer through reams of them on photography groups. Stupid ****! Turns out you aren't yet in the kill-file on one of my six or seven Macs. -- 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 |
#6
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On Fri, 08 Jun 2018 10:38:36 -0400, Davoud wrote:
Davoud: ...Photo at https://www.flickr.com/photos/primeval though the camera is not yet installed for lack of one lousy adapter, which arrived late this afternoon. RichA: Your impressive system is still within the realm of what you might call, "magnified image astrophotography." "Astrophotographers" take 20mm lens shots of the Milky Way, and we have to suffer through reams of them on photography groups. Stupid ****! Turns out you aren't yet in the kill-file on one of my six or seven Macs. Just remember... it's easier to whine about other people doing what you are incapable of doing yourself than it is to stretch youself and learn something new. |
#7
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On Friday, 8 June 2018 18:30:20 UTC+2, Chris L Peterson wrote:
Just remember... it's easier to whine about other people doing what you are incapable of doing yourself than it is to stretch yourself and learn something new. Hold, 1, 2 and 3, breathe and s_t_r_e_t_c_h! ;-) |
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