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#31
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![]() "John "Shecky" Steinberg" wrote Incidentally, this meeting was supposed to take place in the Catskills, but The Nevele was booked that weekend and as a native Jersey City boy, I'm sure you can appreciate the appeal of the chosen meeting place. I thought it was held at Brown's: Jerry Lewis's favorite resort. ? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#32
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You should have used a paper towel roll. lol
Geeze Bill, where were you when I needed you? -- Regards, Eddie Trimarchi ~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.astroshed.com http://www.fitsplug.com "Bill Becker" wrote in message ... "Eddie Trimarchi" wrote in message ... 60mm? What luxury! My first telescope (and I use the term loosely now) was a Tasco 30x30mm. I recieved this scope as a gift many years ago and 30mm? Luxury! I used to have a toilet roll with a magnifying glass stuck to one end and then because nothing was in focus, I had to imagine what the objects looked like! ![]() -- Regards, Eddie Trimarchi ~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.astroshed.com http://www.fitsplug.com You should have used a paper towel roll. lol Best regards, Bill |
#33
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![]() "John 'Put me in, Coach!' Steinberg" wrote More importantly, what's your take on the Backman/Randolph situation? I'm tickled for Willie, happy for the Mets. Backman shot himself in the ass by not disclosing to the Diamondbacks any possible "difficulties" from his past. I would have enjoyed seeing him as a manager - too bad. How about those Meade 5000's? Think they'll make it to the playoffs next year? (Trying to get on topic, or something... then again, not really.) Look at me - I can play - center field! How about that central field of the new Nagler, eh? *yawn* ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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#35
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Eddie Trimarchi wrote:
60mm? What luxury! My first telescope (and I use the term loosely now) was a Tasco 30x30mm. I recieved this scope as a gift many years ago and 30mm? Luxury! I used to have a toilet roll with a magnifying glass stuck to one end and then because nothing was in focus, I had to imagine what the objects looked like! ![]() Wow... I'm surprised you had the time to build it, what with that 50-mile walk to school and back (uphill both ways, of course) followed by the 10-hour shift down the mine. g I had several toilet/kitchen/foil roll scopes too, but most of them were zero magnification instruments, used predominantly for playing pirates and such. --Steve |
#36
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Wow... I'm surprised you had the time to build it, what with that
50-mile walk to school and back (uphill both ways, of course) followed by the 10-hour shift down the mine. g Did we grow up in the same town? You know an awful lot about my childhood.... I had several toilet/kitchen/foil roll scopes too, but most of them were zero magnification instruments, used predominantly for playing pirates and such. Ah yes, but my favorite was the submarine periscope made from two mirrors and a tube for peeking around corners...and above the ocean surface when submerged.. -- Regards, Eddie Trimarchi ~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.astroshed.com http://www.fitsplug.com "Steve Maddison" wrote in message ... Eddie Trimarchi wrote: 60mm? What luxury! My first telescope (and I use the term loosely now) was a Tasco 30x30mm. I recieved this scope as a gift many years ago and 30mm? Luxury! I used to have a toilet roll with a magnifying glass stuck to one end and then because nothing was in focus, I had to imagine what the objects looked like! ![]() Wow... I'm surprised you had the time to build it, what with that 50-mile walk to school and back (uphill both ways, of course) followed by the 10-hour shift down the mine. g I had several toilet/kitchen/foil roll scopes too, but most of them were zero magnification instruments, used predominantly for playing pirates and such. --Steve |
#37
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In article ,
Jon Isaacs wrote: I wonder how many of you who post and lurk here started with a 60mm refractor or something similar? I would like to see a show of hands, lurkers can Email me privately... The first telescope was a 40 mm or so fixed eyepiece scope that I generally used by sighting out my open bedroom window and propping the fixed tripod on top of some books. This was enough to show Saturn being fat, moons of Jupiter, glorius detail in the moon, and spots on the sun. Wonders beyond compare! This was after my first real astronomical experience of the 66-67 (whenever the big one was about then) Leonid shower, which I'd viewed naked eye. My second scope was several years later, and was a 60 mm. The chromatic aberration wasn't too bad (a comment having something to do with my standards and vision, perhaps), and the mount settled down in only 30 seconds or so after being tapped. No finder; I sighted things by guess and by gosh down the tube and swept in alt-az. The really good feature was a zoom lens that took me from something like 30x to something like 90x. Jupiter gained stripes, Saturn went from fat to having rings and a moon, double stars opened up, some nebulae started to appear, and glorious clusters of stars opened up. I'd also stopped sighting out the bedroom window. That was the last scope I owned for quite some time. It didn't survive being loaned to a friend when I was in college. It was more than sufficient to sustain and nurture my interest in astronomy specifically and science generally. I wound up earning a doctorate (diferent field) and occasionally teaching astronomy (sufficient astronomy courses that you needn't be gasping) in a local community college. The concern (" ") about the department store scopes puts me in mind of beginning runners and attitudes for and about them from experienced runners. A different thing I do is run and coach beginning runners. There are always a few experienced folks (rather fewer than the dismissives here, by the way) who dismiss beginners who aren't running 'fast enough' or beginners or experienced runners who are alternating running and walking in their marathon, or don't have 'serious' equipment. My touchstone is -- does this approach produce injury or otherwise get people out of the activity? Run/walk does not, necessarily. (It may, if it is a couch to marathon in 4 months program, but the problem there is too fast to the marathon, not the run/walk.) Not using the 'serious' equipment (mostly a matter of tech fabrics for the clothing) limits some the weather or duration of outdooor runs, but again, not an eliminator or necessarily injurious thing. Wobbly as my 60 mm's mount was, it did settle down. Even without a finder scope, I did find things. Even with some coma and chromatic aberration, I saw Jupiter's stripes and lunar craters. Rather like not using the tech fabrics, all the ills of 'department store' scopes are in line of limiting what you can do -- but not causing injury or preventing anything constructive. Conclusion of the analogy: The most important thing for runners is to get them a) started b) without injury. If a 'crappy' department store scope can satisfy those two for amateur astronomers, then it's fine. imho of course. Of course it's still an excellent idea to talk to an astronomy club, to try out scopes at star parties, and to generally get as much free 'coaching' as you can. I've also finally acquired my first telescopes in ages, a 70 mm refractor and a 20 cm reflector. (I don't count the 20 cm scope of the school's I used in teaching.) More in a moment or six. -- Robert Grumbine http://www.radix.net/~bobg/ Science faqs and amateur activities notes and links. Sagredo (Galileo Galilei) "You present these recondite matters with too much evidence and ease; this great facility makes them less appreciated than they would be had they been presented in a more abstruse manner." Two New Sciences |
#38
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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