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My Dob is an Orion XT-8, my first scope, owned it since January 2003 and am
very pleased with it. Shortly after I got it, I bought the Tectron collimation tools (sight tube with crosshairs, "auto-collimator," and Cheshire). I read up on collimation and spent a couple of hours last February in my below-freezing garage collimating the scope -- I was quite proud of the results as collimation did improve the images in the scope. I recently bought the Orion deluxe laser collimator and have figured out how to use it. For the past few weeks, I've been dragging the scope out to pubic Mars viewings where I and the folks who look through the scope have seen the polar cap, dark surface features, and the like. This morning, I decided to check the collimation. The beam from the laser was not hitting the donut in the center of the mirror and the returned beam was visible on the reflecting surface of the mirror. I dragged out the Tectron tools and started from scratch -- the secondary mirror was not exactly centered in the sight tube so I centered it, checked and re-checked. I fiddled with the secondary until it was a circle in the sight tube, centered all the way around. I then installed the laser and adjusted the secondary setscrews to center the laser dot on the primary mirror after which I adjusted the primary mirror -- using the laser -- and the scope was collimated. I did all this with the focuser bottomed out -- that is, I ran the focuser all the way in until the part that moves in and out was seated against its frame. HOWEVER -- I collimated the scope with the tube tilted at approx 30 degrees. When I ran the focuser out to where it is when eyepieces are focused, and elevated the tube to around 60 degrees, the laser beam slipped out of the donut in the primary. I tried to figure out why this would be happening and found that there is enough side-to-side slop in the focuser to cause the laser collimator or an eyepiece to move ever so slightly from side to side -- it's mighty slight but it's there. Do I need to worry about this? As I say, I've been happy with the scope, saw surface features on Mars with no problems other than those caused by poor seeing; I cleanly split the Epsilon Lyrae double-double; and stars always dissolve into round concentric rings -- so -- it may not be a problem. Or, it may be. What do you folks recommend? -- ---- Joe S. |
#2
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In article , "Joe S."
writes: When I ran the focuser out to where it is when eyepieces are focused, and elevated the tube to around 60 degrees, the laser beam slipped out of the donut in the primary. I tried to figure out why this would be happening and found that there is enough side-to-side slop in the focuser to cause the laser collimator or an eyepiece to move ever so slightly from side to side -- it's mighty slight but it's there. Do I need to worry about this? With a 2" focuser and a 1.25" adapter, I can get very noticeable offsets between collimating with or without the adapter installed. The 2" lock screws offset the adapter, then the adapter screws offset the 1.25" collimator barrel. Worst case is to have the scews on the same side, summing the offset. Maybe 180 degrees apart would minimize this source. Most of my observing is now with 2" capable eyepieces, so I collimate with the 2" section of the laser collimator. That way, any slight offset induced by the clearance between the walls of the focuser and the collimator are taken out when I use a 90 degree offset with a sight tube in the 1.25" adapter. I have the 2" lock screws running down the long axis of the tube, so I can allow for the up-down tube variance with main secondary support shaft. Then I take out the adapter and sight tube and do the laser collimating with the 2" section of the collimator. I noticed a slight wobble in the laser impact point on the primary as I racked the focuser from full in to full out, doubled in the return to the collimator face, so now I set the focuser around where my main two eyepieces will be focused and collimate from there. Just by taking out the adapter and fixing the focus point before collimating has made a very noticeable difference in the performance of my 10" Starfinder dob, 14" Starhopper (now departed to a friend), and the new-to-me 18" Tectron truss dob. So, I'd say start from where the focuser will get the most use, collimate at 2" diameter if you have a choice, and if you need to use the 1.25" adapter have the 2" screws on the opposite side of the barrel from the 1.25" screws. Collimate at 1.25" if that's what you'll be using to observe. Jim "A Bad Night With A Telescope Beats a Good Night Doing Anything Else" |
#3
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Yes, if you have a 2", then pull the 1.25 adapter, and use the 2 inch
eyepiece hole, which usually is a tighter fit than the latter. But if you must use the 1.25 inch hole, then set focuser where you normally use your 1.25 ep's, and set the eyepiece set screw on the collimator just as you would an eyepiece...and then complete the collimation procedure. This should work, as it is the system I use. Then follow up with a Cheshire collimator check, as IMHO, gives more accurate collimation on the primary mirror. (I use laser for the secondary alignment, and Cheshire on the primary)....then a quick trip to defocused Polaris at high power for a final collimation check. TW Joe S. wrote: My Dob is an Orion XT-8, my first scope, owned it since January 2003 and am very pleased with it. Shortly after I got it, I bought the Tectron collimation tools (sight tube with crosshairs, "auto-collimator," and Cheshire). I read up on collimation and spent a couple of hours last February in my below-freezing garage collimating the scope -- I was quite proud of the results as collimation did improve the images in the scope. I recently bought the Orion deluxe laser collimator and have figured out how to use it. For the past few weeks, I've been dragging the scope out to pubic Mars viewings where I and the folks who look through the scope have seen the polar cap, dark surface features, and the like. This morning, I decided to check the collimation. The beam from the laser was not hitting the donut in the center of the mirror and the returned beam was visible on the reflecting surface of the mirror. I dragged out the Tectron tools and started from scratch -- the secondary mirror was not exactly centered in the sight tube so I centered it, checked and re-checked. I fiddled with the secondary until it was a circle in the sight tube, centered all the way around. I then installed the laser and adjusted the secondary setscrews to center the laser dot on the primary mirror after which I adjusted the primary mirror -- using the laser -- and the scope was collimated. I did all this with the focuser bottomed out -- that is, I ran the focuser all the way in until the part that moves in and out was seated against its frame. HOWEVER -- I collimated the scope with the tube tilted at approx 30 degrees. When I ran the focuser out to where it is when eyepieces are focused, and elevated the tube to around 60 degrees, the laser beam slipped out of the donut in the primary. I tried to figure out why this would be happening and found that there is enough side-to-side slop in the focuser to cause the laser collimator or an eyepiece to move ever so slightly from side to side -- it's mighty slight but it's there. Do I need to worry about this? As I say, I've been happy with the scope, saw surface features on Mars with no problems other than those caused by poor seeing; I cleanly split the Epsilon Lyrae double-double; and stars always dissolve into round concentric rings -- so -- it may not be a problem. Or, it may be. What do you folks recommend? |
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