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#1
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Okay, before you guys laugh me off the newsgroup, I have a
combination of eye problems that make "cyclops" astronomical viewing difficult. Basically this is the mess that is my vision: *Myopia (near-sighted) *Amblyopia (lazy eye) *Strabismus (misalignment), seemingly a manual overcorrection of the above amblyopia when I'm tired *Nystagmus (involuntary back-and-forth eye movement), brought on when one eye is brightly illuminated and the other is darkened (typical cyclops observing) The nystagmus is not a problem if I am observing in an area where my "dim" eye can focus on something, except under certain circumstances. An unfiltered view of a full moon can trigger this. Often, therefore, I have to keep my red-LED flashlight handy to focus on an image of sufficient brightness to calm the jitters in my observing eye. This is all rather nasty. It finally occurred to me that a binoviewer might be my ultimate solution. On one hand, it seems like such an expensive accessory for a cheap scope (well, cheap is relative: the street price here for a 4 GT is equivalent to U.S.$785); on the other, it might take the difficulties I have observing and really kick up my enjoyment level. So, I'm considering a Denkmeier binoviewer, maybe the Denk II if I can swing the extra bucks, and a couple of the 8-24 mm Televue Zoom EPs. From what I've read, this combination should work fairly well in a scope that can only accept 1.25" accessories. Can anybody with binoviewer experience offer some comments on the idea? How about the Zoom Televue EPs in a binoviewer? That would seem to be a natural place for them, IMO. Any comments about how dim planetary images appear when using a 4" scope with a binoviewer? I tend not to hunt faint fuzzies unless the transparency happens to be amazing -- a rare thing here in Tokyo. Thanks. trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. // http://mp3.com/trane_francks/ |
#2
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![]() Hi Trane, I have a friend with many of the same eye difficulties as you. Have you thought of going CCD and a laptop? Clear Skies, Bruce |
#3
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On 09/30/03 22:55 +0900, Bruce wrote:
Hi Trane, I have a friend with many of the same eye difficulties as you. Have you thought of going CCD and a laptop? Yes and no. I'd love to get into imaging, but only as an addition to visual observing. I enjoy getting behind the eyepiece way too much to give it up. On my light-polluted balcony, the nystagmus is usually a non-issue; I'm just looking for a way to toss that monkey off my back and I think a binoviewer might be the answer. Cheers! ![]() trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. // http://mp3.com/trane_francks/ |
#4
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I once owned the TeleVue binoviewer (which I stupidly sold) with a pair of
TeleVue 8-24mm click-stop zoom eyepieces and used with a 4" f5.6 refractor. The combination worked very well on planets and brilliantly on the moon. It made for very relaxed viewing. Open clusters were very satisfying too. However, I would try before you buy if possible because I've heard that some people have difficulty in keeping the two images together. For me though, there was no problem. If you can't try before buying, shop around to see if you can find a sympathetic dealer who would be happy for you to return the goods should you not be able to get on with them. Clear skies, Steve Trane Francks wrote in message ... Okay, before you guys laugh me off the newsgroup, I have a combination of eye problems that make "cyclops" astronomical viewing difficult. Basically this is the mess that is my vision: *Myopia (near-sighted) *Amblyopia (lazy eye) *Strabismus (misalignment), seemingly a manual overcorrection of the above amblyopia when I'm tired *Nystagmus (involuntary back-and-forth eye movement), brought on when one eye is brightly illuminated and the other is darkened (typical cyclops observing) The nystagmus is not a problem if I am observing in an area where my "dim" eye can focus on something, except under certain circumstances. An unfiltered view of a full moon can trigger this. Often, therefore, I have to keep my red-LED flashlight handy to focus on an image of sufficient brightness to calm the jitters in my observing eye. This is all rather nasty. It finally occurred to me that a binoviewer might be my ultimate solution. On one hand, it seems like such an expensive accessory for a cheap scope (well, cheap is relative: the street price here for a 4 GT is equivalent to U.S.$785); on the other, it might take the difficulties I have observing and really kick up my enjoyment level. So, I'm considering a Denkmeier binoviewer, maybe the Denk II if I can swing the extra bucks, and a couple of the 8-24 mm Televue Zoom EPs. From what I've read, this combination should work fairly well in a scope that can only accept 1.25" accessories. Can anybody with binoviewer experience offer some comments on the idea? How about the Zoom Televue EPs in a binoviewer? That would seem to be a natural place for them, IMO. Any comments about how dim planetary images appear when using a 4" scope with a binoviewer? I tend not to hunt faint fuzzies unless the transparency happens to be amazing -- a rare thing here in Tokyo. Thanks. trane -- file://------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. // http://mp3.com/trane_francks/ |
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On 10/01/03 02:55 +0900, Steve Paterson wrote:
I once owned the TeleVue binoviewer (which I stupidly sold) with a pair of TeleVue 8-24mm click-stop zoom eyepieces and used with a 4" f5.6 refractor. The combination worked very well on planets and brilliantly on the moon. It made for very relaxed viewing. Open clusters were very satisfying too. Thanks for the observations. ![]() However, I would try before you buy if possible because I've heard that some people have difficulty in keeping the two images together. For me though, Thanks to being born with a lazy eye, merging images is a tough task at any time. When I use binos, I never get a perfectly merged image, so I expect it to be more of the same with binoviewers. Interestingly, even for me, viewing with both eyes offers far richer detail than with a single eye. Merging issues aside, it's obvious that the brain uses both images to good effect, even in my case. Thanks for the feedback. Keep it coming! trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. // http://mp3.com/trane_francks/ |
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On Tue, 30 Sep 2003 15:02:43 +0900, Trane Francks wrote:
snip Can anybody with binoviewer experience offer some comments on the idea? How about the Zoom Televue EPs in a binoviewer? That would seem to be a natural place for them, IMO. Any comments about how dim planetary images appear when using a 4" scope with a binoviewer? I tend not to hunt faint fuzzies unless the transparency happens to be amazing -- a rare thing here in Tokyo. Thanks. trane Hi trane, While I haven't used the TV zooms (except for the nagler zoom, I haven't really used a zoom I'm all that fond of - but that's a personal issue) I can make some comments about using a binoviewer with a small scope. I've used several different ones in my 4" APO, and had good results on lunar and planetary with most of them (including the denkmeier standard, FMC, II and TV Binoview). DSO's are something of a mixed bag. Some show well, others cry for more aperture. Planetary (and lunar) images don't dim much at all. In fact testing LM with and without the binoviewer (a denkmeier standard in this case), I find I only lose around .2-.3 magnitudes. Some folks have reported more, and some less so obviously ymmv. Planets and the moon look simply fantastic in the binoviewer and honestly, one look at luna would be enough to convince me to get one if I didn't already have one. Hope this helps. Tom T. |
#7
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On 10/01/03 23:22 +0900, Tom T. wrote:
ymmv. Planets and the moon look simply fantastic in the binoviewer and honestly, one look at luna would be enough to convince me to get one if I didn't already have one. Super! Since I observe the moon an awful lot, this sounds very, very appealing. Hope this helps. It does indeed, Tom. It's great to hear that you've had good results in a small scope. Great food for thought. Cheers, trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. // http://mp3.com/trane_francks/ |
#8
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On Wed, 01 Oct 2003 23:43:36 +0900, Trane Francks
wrote: On 10/01/03 23:22 +0900, Tom T. wrote: ymmv. Planets and the moon look simply fantastic in the binoviewer and honestly, one look at luna would be enough to convince me to get one if I didn't already have one. Super! Since I observe the moon an awful lot, this sounds very, very appealing. Hope this helps. It does indeed, Tom. It's great to hear that you've had good results in a small scope. Great food for thought. Cheers, trane Trane, One thing that just occured to me: I'm not sure the Denkmier will work with the nexstar 4 because of the arrangement needed for the Optical Corrector System (OCS), which you will need if you don't have enough focus travel. If you do need a corrector to come to focus, I'm reasonably sure the televue unit would work fine (it would however limit you to a 2x amplification factor) . If you are interested in the Denkmeier unit, you might be advised to repost this question in the binoviewer yahoo group or write or call Russ at Denkmeier Optical and inquire. Tom T. |
#9
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Hi Tom, something else you might consider is the Adirondack Video
Stellacam EX and a good monitor. This camera integrates up to 128 frames at a time and will give you the equivelant of 2 to 4 times your mirror diameter. And it doesn't weigh a lot either. Mark Tom Trusock wrote: On Wed, 01 Oct 2003 23:43:36 +0900, Trane Francks wrote: On 10/01/03 23:22 +0900, Tom T. wrote: ymmv. Planets and the moon look simply fantastic in the binoviewer and honestly, one look at luna would be enough to convince me to get one if I didn't already have one. Super! Since I observe the moon an awful lot, this sounds very, very appealing. Hope this helps. It does indeed, Tom. It's great to hear that you've had good results in a small scope. Great food for thought. Cheers, trane Trane, One thing that just occured to me: I'm not sure the Denkmier will work with the nexstar 4 because of the arrangement needed for the Optical Corrector System (OCS), which you will need if you don't have enough focus travel. If you do need a corrector to come to focus, I'm reasonably sure the televue unit would work fine (it would however limit you to a 2x amplification factor) . If you are interested in the Denkmeier unit, you might be advised to repost this question in the binoviewer yahoo group or write or call Russ at Denkmeier Optical and inquire. Tom T. |
#10
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On 10/02/03 04:29 +0900, Tom Trusock wrote:
One thing that just occured to me: I'm not sure the Denkmier will work with the nexstar 4 because of the arrangement needed for the Optical Corrector System (OCS), which you will need if you don't have enough focus travel. If you do need a corrector to come to focus, I'm Hmmmm. Thanks for that. I just sent e-mail to Denkmeier. We'll see if there are any known issues with their products and the NexStar 4 GT. Cheers! trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. // http://mp3.com/trane_francks/ |
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