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To reply, remove the "z" if one appears in my address "Rank Amateur" wrote in message link.net... Last night I attended a star party here in Central Texas. The seeing was unusually good for this area, and, among other things, I observed the Trapezium through three SCT's -- an old orange-tube C8, a brand new one-arm C8, and a recent-vintage Meade 10". Through the orange tube, the Trapezium stars were beautiful, sharp points and the E and F stars easy to see. Through the other two scopes, the Trapezium stars appeared a bit "dull" and lackluster, and the E and F stars were barely perceptible. Was the orange tube just an unusually good SCT, or maybe it was just better collimated? The eyepieces and diagonals were comparable on the two C8's, and the Meade had high-dollar TeleVue eyepieces and diagonal. I tell you, after observing through the orange tube, I am convinced that SCT's can give excellent views. Any of those scopes should have shown the Trapezium with all six stars crisp and well defined, given the kind of seeing you describe, and the fact you saw them that way in one of the scopes. The other scopes may not have been properly collimated, may not have been in thermal equilibrium with the surrounding air, or both. But they should all have shown all six stars sharply if one did. And the 10" easiest of all... Could be a bad scope, but chances are, it was collimation and/or equilibration... |
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