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Hey All...
I'm wonder if anyone has tried this or thought to try this... I have an ETX-60 (lots of fun so far) which is a 60mm achromatic refractor. Now with the ETX-60 and 70 the front objective lens can be removed. Has anyone thought to remove that lens and replace it with an apochromatic lens? The Backyard Astronomy guide shows that the difference between the two are the number and shape of the lens. I would think this is more than a garage project as someone would have to figure out the optics to fit the tube and mirror design of the ETX-60/70. Since the ETX-60 and 70 both share the same OTA only one kit would be needed for both scopes. Given the fact that there are thousands (if not 10's of thousands) of ETX-60/70's on the market a $100-150 dollar acro to apo conversion kit might be a sweet little cottage business. Any thoughts? |
#2
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XxXxXxX wrote:
I'm wonder if anyone has tried this or thought to try this... I have an ETX-60 (lots of fun so far) which is a 60mm achromatic refractor. Now with the ETX-60 and 70 the front objective lens can be removed. Has anyone thought to remove that lens and replace it with an apochromatic lens? The Backyard Astronomy guide shows that the difference between the two are the number and shape of the lens. ....and the cost. One can save a substantial money by scrimping on the mechanicals, as the recent low-cost small apos (or near-apos) have demonstrated. But manufacturing the lenses to the point where the smoothness is on par with the color correction has at some point an irreducible cost. It just isn't a matter of $100 or so. I would think this is more than a garage project as someone would have to figure out the optics to fit the tube and mirror design of the ETX-60/70. Since the ETX-60 and 70 both share the same OTA only one kit would be needed for both scopes. Given the fact that there are thousands (if not 10's of thousands) of ETX-60/70's on the market a $100-150 dollar acro to apo conversion kit might be a sweet little cottage business. The tough part isn't fitting the lens to the scope (although it certainly is something you'd need to deal with). It's manufacturing an apo lens (of any appreciable size) for only $100. If you can do that, screw the tube, people will snap the lens up. I won't say never, because seeming optical miracles have happened. But it's definitely not a weekend project. If anyone were to do this on the cheap like you describe it, it would have to be someone who knows quite a bit about optics, taking advantage of something quite unusual. It's not a matter of tinkering with glasses until something "clicks." Brian Tung The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.txt |
#3
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