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canopus56 wrote:
On Sep 16, 8:04 am, "Steve Paul" wrote: snip Thanks to all. The answer to my narrow question regarding the altitude adjustment is that it is not "due" east but any star "in the eastern sky" near the celestial equator. Practically, this means somewhere east-southeast, where the celestial equator has enough altitude to conveniently acquire a target, but still as close to the horizon as possible. Same principle applies to using a western sky star. - Thanks, Canopus56 Once you have done this a lot, it will become instinctive. You will find that it takes less time to do a nice drift alignment than all the talking ya do with your observing buddies when ya first show up at an observing site. BTW, the polar scope option is viable, and used properly will get you a pretty good alignment. -- AM |
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