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SkyHawke wrote:
Hi all, I am new to both the group and Astronomy. I was viewing J & R's website tonight (they emailed me a 'special deal' thing) and noticed these pair of Image Stabilized Binoculars: http://www.jandr.com/JRProductPage.p...uct_Id=1949107 They claim "Uses a patented mechanical system that produces a stabilized image without electic power source / 16x magnification " but I cannot find any review-related information online (through google web or groups). Sounds like they may be hand stabilized .. like my binos g |
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Yes, that would be interesting to patent. . .
I have a pair of Meade 9 x 63 Astronomy ("Big Honkin Binocs") that I have learned are not all that easy to use for Astronomy. I bought them from a local dealer because I have 30 days to trade up (10 to return). I really wanted the Cannon image stabilizers, but they didn't have the 10 x 50's AND the price is a little steep. I think I might return these and go with a small scope to start (Either a new Celestron NexTar 80GT or a used Orion SkyMax 127). Though I am having a ball, it was very hard for my kids to focus, find, hold (I tried to hold the binocs for them, but I cannot point them too). OK, off topic. . . -=SkyHawke=- "Phil Wheeler" wrote in message ... SkyHawke wrote: Hi all, I am new to both the group and Astronomy. I was viewing J & R's website tonight (they emailed me a 'special deal' thing) and noticed these pair of Image Stabilized Binoculars: http://www.jandr.com/JRProductPage.p...uct_Id=1949107 They claim "Uses a patented mechanical system that produces a stabilized image without electic power source / 16x magnification " but I cannot find any review-related information online (through google web or groups). Sounds like they may be hand stabilized .. like my binos g |
#3
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Yes, that would be interesting to patent. . .
I have a pair of Meade 9 x 63 Astronomy ("Big Honkin Binocs") that I have learned are not all that easy to use for Astronomy. I bought them from a local dealer because I have 30 days to trade up (10 to return). I really wanted the Cannon image stabilizers, but they didn't have the 10 x 50's AND the price is a little steep. I think I might return these and go with a small scope to start (Either a new Celestron NexTar 80GT or a used Orion SkyMax 127). Though I am having a ball, it was very hard for my kids to focus, find, hold (I tried to hold the binocs for them, but I cannot point them too). OK, off topic. . . -=SkyHawke=- "Phil Wheeler" wrote in message ... SkyHawke wrote: Hi all, I am new to both the group and Astronomy. I was viewing J & R's website tonight (they emailed me a 'special deal' thing) and noticed these pair of Image Stabilized Binoculars: http://www.jandr.com/JRProductPage.p...uct_Id=1949107 They claim "Uses a patented mechanical system that produces a stabilized image without electic power source / 16x magnification " but I cannot find any review-related information online (through google web or groups). Sounds like they may be hand stabilized .. like my binos g |
#4
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SkyHawke wrote:
Yes, that would be interesting to patent. . . I have a pair of Meade 9 x 63 Astronomy ("Big Honkin Binocs") that I have learned are not all that easy to use for Astronomy. I bought them from a local dealer because I have 30 days to trade up (10 to return). I really wanted the Cannon image stabilizers, but they didn't have the 10 x 50's AND the price is a little steep. I think I might return these and go with a small scope to start (Either a new Celestron NexTar 80GT or a used Orion SkyMax 127). Though I am having a ball, it was very hard for my kids to focus, find, hold (I tried to hold the binocs for them, but I cannot point them too). With binos, a parallelogram mount (e.g., Unimount) is the only way to go. With those you can really see without holding. Phil |
#5
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SkyHawke wrote:
Yes, that would be interesting to patent. . . I have a pair of Meade 9 x 63 Astronomy ("Big Honkin Binocs") that I have learned are not all that easy to use for Astronomy. I bought them from a local dealer because I have 30 days to trade up (10 to return). I really wanted the Cannon image stabilizers, but they didn't have the 10 x 50's AND the price is a little steep. I think I might return these and go with a small scope to start (Either a new Celestron NexTar 80GT or a used Orion SkyMax 127). Though I am having a ball, it was very hard for my kids to focus, find, hold (I tried to hold the binocs for them, but I cannot point them too). With binos, a parallelogram mount (e.g., Unimount) is the only way to go. With those you can really see without holding. Phil |
#6
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RC From: Robert Casey
RC Organization: wa2ise RC Subject: Mars hype RC Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 05:33:49 GMT RC RC The way the news media is talking about Mars being closer than ever RC in the last 60 thousand years in a few hours makes it sound like the RC Earth is going to get sideswiped or something. As if Mars is going to RC streak across the sky as big as the Moon or something.... RC In reality Mars is going to look exactly the same as it did a day ago RC (ignoring a dust storm flare up). From my location northeast of New RC York City, it was a bright pink star. Actually the *only* "star" RC visible in the entire sky here in Oradell NJ. Tonight it's cloudy :-( The sky HAS been lousy almost right up thru the proximity and opposition of Mars. In the last couple days we got learish skies, so mars really stands out in the southeast-south after dark. I view from Manhattan and Brooklyn. From reports of my correspondents, for the Yahoo NYSkies discussion group and PazMinBits column, the viewings of Mars were very succesful, so long as the pllanet was at all visible thru haze and thin cloud. Attendance at a Carl Schrz Pk viewing on Thursday evening by a couple NYSkies members drew about 500 visitors! The viewing at South Street Seaport by the Amateur Astronomers Association was packed with at least a full thousand visitors. These could well have be at the seaport already, but hey did then come to the scopes for a look at Mars. The ksy is more or less clear for this weekend (it rained on Saturday) so I'll look at the planet again. I also issue for the NYC chapter of National Space Society a column SpaceWalk, which covered Mars for its June, July, and August issues. Mars will also be fetured in September, under preparation now. I caution about the htpe and urge its readers -- specially being that they are space travel fans -- to keep watching Mars all thru the rest of this year. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
#7
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RC From: Robert Casey
RC Organization: wa2ise RC Subject: Mars hype RC Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 05:33:49 GMT RC RC The way the news media is talking about Mars being closer than ever RC in the last 60 thousand years in a few hours makes it sound like the RC Earth is going to get sideswiped or something. As if Mars is going to RC streak across the sky as big as the Moon or something.... RC In reality Mars is going to look exactly the same as it did a day ago RC (ignoring a dust storm flare up). From my location northeast of New RC York City, it was a bright pink star. Actually the *only* "star" RC visible in the entire sky here in Oradell NJ. Tonight it's cloudy :-( The sky HAS been lousy almost right up thru the proximity and opposition of Mars. In the last couple days we got learish skies, so mars really stands out in the southeast-south after dark. I view from Manhattan and Brooklyn. From reports of my correspondents, for the Yahoo NYSkies discussion group and PazMinBits column, the viewings of Mars were very succesful, so long as the pllanet was at all visible thru haze and thin cloud. Attendance at a Carl Schrz Pk viewing on Thursday evening by a couple NYSkies members drew about 500 visitors! The viewing at South Street Seaport by the Amateur Astronomers Association was packed with at least a full thousand visitors. These could well have be at the seaport already, but hey did then come to the scopes for a look at Mars. The ksy is more or less clear for this weekend (it rained on Saturday) so I'll look at the planet again. I also issue for the NYC chapter of National Space Society a column SpaceWalk, which covered Mars for its June, July, and August issues. Mars will also be fetured in September, under preparation now. I caution about the htpe and urge its readers -- specially being that they are space travel fans -- to keep watching Mars all thru the rest of this year. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
#8
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S From: "Starlord"
S Subject: So many People You hit on a very raw nerve for home astronomy clubs. NASA has a project called 'Ambassadors of space' or similar. They recruit people from the countryside to be paraNASA agents in their twons to stage space-themed talks, shows, and other PR events. These folk are privisoned with NASA literature, posters, baseball caps, intro letters on NASA letterhead, and so on. Of course the town officials will go agag to give what ever these ambassadors want: rooms for echibits, car service, handymen to set up exhibits, interviews, radio/TV coverage, supper witht e mayor, and so on. What the catch? Home astronomy clubs are passed over. NASA hasn't pointed advertised this project to the clubs or actively solicited their role in it. The only thing the club can hope is that by chance one of the chosen 'ambassadoes' happens also to be a member and can include the club in his promos. Hence, the home atronomy clubs aren't too pleased to see NASA pour money, materail, support to the Ambassador project and then nothing substantial to the club. Result? Every one goes to see and hear the 'NASA agent' and the club withers away from society's neglect. About sidewalk starviewing. It depends largely on how the town is structured. It seems from your past and instant posts that Rosamond isn't very people-friendly. In a town where people can walk or stroll on dedicated sidewalks or have transit to move them around, sidewalk astronomy fares far better, even it thrives. One thing that strikes me from the numerous reports here on Mars parties is the immense flood of cars converging on the viewing site! They clog the roads, hog space on the premises, get in each other's way, force people to walk from far off parking spots, and shine headlights into the viewing field, fill the local air with noxious fumes and smoke, at the least. Yet on October 4th, with clear skies, the American Urban Star Fest convenes in Central Park of Manhattan. We expect about 5,000 visitors, filling the Sheep Meadow area of that park. A parking lot for 5,000 cars ould be humongous! Like that around a sports arena. Guess what? Just about EVERY ONE of the visitors arrives by foot or transit. Only a dozen, at the most, come by car. (I'm ure a bunch arrive by taxi, but the vehicle is recycled to the street for other riders.) The climb down from the residence towers flaning the park, ooze out of the subway staris dotting the perimeter of the park, hop off buses circulating around the park. They lay out their blanets, break out a picnic supper, gaze with binoculars and small scopes, and generally have one hell of a funky happy evening under the stars. Similar scenes take place elsewhere in New York, on a much more modest scale, like the 500ish who showed up in Carl Schurz Park for a Mars viewing on the 28th of August under clearish skies. I can't really count the scene at South Street Seaport on the 29th because the seaport is filled with thousands of visitors anyway. So the thousandish who flocked to our scopes were probably alrady on the grounds for other attractions. S I have contacted the local schools, back when I first moved here and then again S a few months before my car broke down and died. It seems that unless I'm tired S into NASA or some place on Edwards, I don't count for anything. When I was able S to go set up on my corner, I would get kids from school who asked questions S they'd not get answers from or for in school and they also complained about how S the people from edwards/nasa talked "Down" to them. The only after school they S do here are football games, unlike the schools in Hawaii that do put on such S things. Here they say that because so many use the school bus, they can't do S anything. I've even offered to show the classes my scope and if it was the righ S t S time of the month, could show them the Moon in daylight hours. That got me "You S can't see the moon in day time!" answer! S S And ofcourse, now that I don't have a car, I can't go anywhere, I tried one tri S p S to the corner with my dob on a radio flyer wagon ( even have a photo of it ), S but coming home was a nightmear of a walk along a road with no sidewalks and S cars doing 55 past me. S S I've sent printed notices to all the newspapers in the area, called up two of S them. Even sent notes to local radio stations and one UHF t.v. station. S S Nothing. S S The one astronomy club in the AV area, who meets down in Palmdale, knows all to S well about me and what I do, and the first time I showed up with my Stargazer S Steve Dob and was told I should get a Real Telescope, I've not gone back since S then. S S So, until I can save up the moneys to buy another car, I'm now : S S The Lone ( Grounded ) Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond. S Continued in next message. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
#9
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S From: "Starlord"
S Subject: So many People You hit on a very raw nerve for home astronomy clubs. NASA has a project called 'Ambassadors of space' or similar. They recruit people from the countryside to be paraNASA agents in their twons to stage space-themed talks, shows, and other PR events. These folk are privisoned with NASA literature, posters, baseball caps, intro letters on NASA letterhead, and so on. Of course the town officials will go agag to give what ever these ambassadors want: rooms for echibits, car service, handymen to set up exhibits, interviews, radio/TV coverage, supper witht e mayor, and so on. What the catch? Home astronomy clubs are passed over. NASA hasn't pointed advertised this project to the clubs or actively solicited their role in it. The only thing the club can hope is that by chance one of the chosen 'ambassadoes' happens also to be a member and can include the club in his promos. Hence, the home atronomy clubs aren't too pleased to see NASA pour money, materail, support to the Ambassador project and then nothing substantial to the club. Result? Every one goes to see and hear the 'NASA agent' and the club withers away from society's neglect. About sidewalk starviewing. It depends largely on how the town is structured. It seems from your past and instant posts that Rosamond isn't very people-friendly. In a town where people can walk or stroll on dedicated sidewalks or have transit to move them around, sidewalk astronomy fares far better, even it thrives. One thing that strikes me from the numerous reports here on Mars parties is the immense flood of cars converging on the viewing site! They clog the roads, hog space on the premises, get in each other's way, force people to walk from far off parking spots, and shine headlights into the viewing field, fill the local air with noxious fumes and smoke, at the least. Yet on October 4th, with clear skies, the American Urban Star Fest convenes in Central Park of Manhattan. We expect about 5,000 visitors, filling the Sheep Meadow area of that park. A parking lot for 5,000 cars ould be humongous! Like that around a sports arena. Guess what? Just about EVERY ONE of the visitors arrives by foot or transit. Only a dozen, at the most, come by car. (I'm ure a bunch arrive by taxi, but the vehicle is recycled to the street for other riders.) The climb down from the residence towers flaning the park, ooze out of the subway staris dotting the perimeter of the park, hop off buses circulating around the park. They lay out their blanets, break out a picnic supper, gaze with binoculars and small scopes, and generally have one hell of a funky happy evening under the stars. Similar scenes take place elsewhere in New York, on a much more modest scale, like the 500ish who showed up in Carl Schurz Park for a Mars viewing on the 28th of August under clearish skies. I can't really count the scene at South Street Seaport on the 29th because the seaport is filled with thousands of visitors anyway. So the thousandish who flocked to our scopes were probably alrady on the grounds for other attractions. S I have contacted the local schools, back when I first moved here and then again S a few months before my car broke down and died. It seems that unless I'm tired S into NASA or some place on Edwards, I don't count for anything. When I was able S to go set up on my corner, I would get kids from school who asked questions S they'd not get answers from or for in school and they also complained about how S the people from edwards/nasa talked "Down" to them. The only after school they S do here are football games, unlike the schools in Hawaii that do put on such S things. Here they say that because so many use the school bus, they can't do S anything. I've even offered to show the classes my scope and if it was the righ S t S time of the month, could show them the Moon in daylight hours. That got me "You S can't see the moon in day time!" answer! S S And ofcourse, now that I don't have a car, I can't go anywhere, I tried one tri S p S to the corner with my dob on a radio flyer wagon ( even have a photo of it ), S but coming home was a nightmear of a walk along a road with no sidewalks and S cars doing 55 past me. S S I've sent printed notices to all the newspapers in the area, called up two of S them. Even sent notes to local radio stations and one UHF t.v. station. S S Nothing. S S The one astronomy club in the AV area, who meets down in Palmdale, knows all to S well about me and what I do, and the first time I showed up with my Stargazer S Steve Dob and was told I should get a Real Telescope, I've not gone back since S then. S S So, until I can save up the moneys to buy another car, I'm now : S S The Lone ( Grounded ) Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond. S Continued in next message. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
#10
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Continued from previous message.
S and as an old song by Blue eyes said: That's Life! --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
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New Image of Comet Halley in the Cold | Ron Baalke | Science | 0 | September 2nd 03 04:31 PM |