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Hi
I wanted to buy an equatorial mount for casual viewing that will be left permanently outside. I was shocked at the prices (£150 +). I've got access to a welder and basic workshop facilities and was thinking of making my own out of an old bike frame I've got. Does anyone know if this is possible? It's only got to take the weight of a 3" refractor. Alternatively, does anyone know where I can but a cheap mount from, I only want to spend about £30-£35. P.S. I made my own Alt-Az mount which was quite easy. |
#2
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On Wed, 3 Sep 2003 19:34:18 +0100, "Ricardo"
wrote: Hi I wanted to buy an equatorial mount for casual viewing that will be left permanently outside. I was shocked at the prices (£150 +). I've got access to a welder and basic workshop facilities and was thinking of making my own out of an old bike frame I've got. Does anyone know if this is possible? It's only got to take the weight of a 3" refractor. Alternatively, does anyone know where I can but a cheap mount from, I only want to spend about £30-£35. P.S. I made my own Alt-Az mount which was quite easy. Anything is possible to someone with DIY skills and enthusiasm! I don't think you'll get a useful mount for much less than £100, they are expensive even second-hnd. I suppose an AP1200 is out of the question then? (joke). I've seen old mounts - perfectly usable - sell within the price range you are talking about. An old Fullerscopes Mk11 or III (sans drives) would fit the bill. No, I don't have one. ChrisH UK Astro Ads: http://www.UKAstroAds.co.uk |
#3
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Stephen Tonkin wrote:
Ricardo wrote: I wanted to buy an equatorial mount for casual viewing that will be left permanently outside. I was shocked at the prices (£150 +). I've got access to a welder and basic workshop facilities and was thinking of making my own If filthy lucre is limited, and it really is only for casual viewing, you might want to try your hand at one of the "pipe mounts" that are in most of the old ATM books (IIRC Howard - _Standard Book for Telescope Making_ -- has 3 different designs). These tend to use 2-inch or 2.5-inch galvanised pipe and fittings, "off the shelf". Also try KeeKlamps (http://www.keeKlamps.com ) - just found them myself - for handrails around an access platform at the Astronomy Centre. I have seen equatorial mounts built on car differentials, remove the diff in the centre and it makes a neat English mount ! Steve -- Steve Taylor Technical Director Astronomy Centre http://www.astronomycentre.org.uk |
#4
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Hi
You could even try contacting TAL to see if you can buy one of their monster built wooden tripods without a scope on it. I actually stood atop one of these tripods to do som wiring a few months ago (wooden legs supposedly insulting me from shocks, how wrong was i) Rob "Ricardo" wrote in message ... Hi I wanted to buy an equatorial mount for casual viewing that will be left permanently outside. I was shocked at the prices (£150 +). I've got access to a welder and basic workshop facilities and was thinking of making my own out of an old bike frame I've got. Does anyone know if this is possible? It's only got to take the weight of a 3" refractor. Alternatively, does anyone know where I can but a cheap mount from, I only want to spend about £30-£35. P.S. I made my own Alt-Az mount which was quite easy. |
#5
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http://www.sherwoods-photo.com/tal_scopes/tal_fs.htm
"Robert Geake" wrote in message ... Hi You could even try contacting TAL to see if you can buy one of their monster built wooden tripods without a scope on it. I actually stood atop one of these tripods to do som wiring a few months ago (wooden legs supposedly insulting me from shocks, how wrong was i) Rob "Ricardo" wrote in message ... Hi I wanted to buy an equatorial mount for casual viewing that will be left permanently outside. I was shocked at the prices (£150 +). I've got access to a welder and basic workshop facilities and was thinking of making my own out of an old bike frame I've got. Does anyone know if this is possible? It's only got to take the weight of a 3" refractor. Alternatively, does anyone know where I can but a cheap mount from, I only want to spend about £30-£35. P.S. I made my own Alt-Az mount which was quite easy. |
#6
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Hi,
Thanks for all the replies. If I can't find anything in my price range, I'll have a go at making one. "Robert Geake" wrote in message ... http://www.sherwoods-photo.com/tal_scopes/tal_fs.htm "Robert Geake" wrote in message ... Hi You could even try contacting TAL to see if you can buy one of their monster built wooden tripods without a scope on it. I actually stood atop one of these tripods to do som wiring a few months ago (wooden legs supposedly insulting me from shocks, how wrong was i) Rob "Ricardo" wrote in message ... Hi I wanted to buy an equatorial mount for casual viewing that will be left permanently outside. I was shocked at the prices (£150 +). I've got access to a welder and basic workshop facilities and was thinking of making my own out of an old bike frame I've got. Does anyone know if this is possible? It's only got to take the weight of a 3" refractor. Alternatively, does anyone know where I can but a cheap mount from, I only want to spend about £30-£35. P.S. I made my own Alt-Az mount which was quite easy. |
#7
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"Ricardo" wrote in message ...
Hi, Thanks for all the replies. If I can't find anything in my price range, I'll have a go at making one. Hi, Sorry to take so long to post. But for some reason I can't get this new website to come up in a browser. Only as a direct link. I put some quick shots of my Mk111 Fullerscopes mounting (which ChrisH recommended in an earlier post) on a Mysite website. And then spent the rest of the morning trying to publish it to the web. Then I had to go to work. You should be able to get a Mk111 equatorial mounting from about £50 upwards (certainly under a hundred with a pier (or tripod) and slow motions & synchronous drive all in good original condition) A bare head without slow motions should be well under £50 IMHO. If they'll sell it at that price. g There were three types of base to the Mk111. Tripod (for three legs), pot (for a pipe) and flat plate (for screwing to a post). Put a wanted ad on Astro Ads (link at the bottom of all ChrisH's posts) for a Mk111 Fullerscopes mounting (that's if nobody offers you one privately as result of this thread). Try and get one with slow motions and preferably with the little synchronous motor drive. Which will keep an object in the field of view for hours if you line the mounting's polar axis up on the pole star. The Mk111 mountings are ideal for small refractors. Mine even held my 6" f/8 refractor until I managed to obtain a Mk1V mounting. (The Mk111's bigger brother). Mine live permanently out of doors with a small lightweight tarpaulin bungee hooked over each mounting. An alternative to the Fullerscopes would be the Charles Frank equatorial. There were at least two models of conventional german equatorial. The smaller one is similar to the Fullerscopes MK111. I hope the link works for you. If it does I'll put some more images on the website tomorrow (when it's light enough to take some more pictures). One point worth remembering. If you have to buy a new set of tube rings for your scope. It might be a good idea to line them with more felt. The cheapo rings I bought by mail order have scratched both my OTA's to death. Good luck. Chris.B http://mysite.freeserve.com/fullerscopesmk3 http://mysite.freeserve.com/fullersc...ng/index.jhtml |
#8
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Thanks for the advice Chris.
"Chris.B" wrote in message om... "Ricardo" wrote in message ... Hi, Thanks for all the replies. If I can't find anything in my price range, I'll have a go at making one. Hi, Sorry to take so long to post. But for some reason I can't get this new website to come up in a browser. Only as a direct link. I put some quick shots of my Mk111 Fullerscopes mounting (which ChrisH recommended in an earlier post) on a Mysite website. And then spent the rest of the morning trying to publish it to the web. Then I had to go to work. You should be able to get a Mk111 equatorial mounting from about £50 upwards (certainly under a hundred with a pier (or tripod) and slow motions & synchronous drive all in good original condition) A bare head without slow motions should be well under £50 IMHO. If they'll sell it at that price. g There were three types of base to the Mk111. Tripod (for three legs), pot (for a pipe) and flat plate (for screwing to a post). Put a wanted ad on Astro Ads (link at the bottom of all ChrisH's posts) for a Mk111 Fullerscopes mounting (that's if nobody offers you one privately as result of this thread). Try and get one with slow motions and preferably with the little synchronous motor drive. Which will keep an object in the field of view for hours if you line the mounting's polar axis up on the pole star. The Mk111 mountings are ideal for small refractors. Mine even held my 6" f/8 refractor until I managed to obtain a Mk1V mounting. (The Mk111's bigger brother). Mine live permanently out of doors with a small lightweight tarpaulin bungee hooked over each mounting. An alternative to the Fullerscopes would be the Charles Frank equatorial. There were at least two models of conventional german equatorial. The smaller one is similar to the Fullerscopes MK111. I hope the link works for you. If it does I'll put some more images on the website tomorrow (when it's light enough to take some more pictures). One point worth remembering. If you have to buy a new set of tube rings for your scope. It might be a good idea to line them with more felt. The cheapo rings I bought by mail order have scratched both my OTA's to death. Good luck. Chris.B http://mysite.freeserve.com/fullerscopesmk3 http://mysite.freeserve.com/fullersc...ng/index.jhtml |
#9
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In message , Chris.B
writes Dare I recommend Freeserve's Mysite website builder without falling foul of the commercialism rules? I don't want to start another flame war! It really is incredibly easy to put some images and text together and all completely free of charge. NO HTML required! Those of you clutching fuzzy astro images. Or even fuzzier pics of your gear, to your assorted bosoms. Could share them with us. The images, not the bosoms! http://mysite.freeserve.com/fullerscopes_mk3 http://mysite.freeserve.com/fullerscopes_mk4 Chris.B Nice sites, but as a fairly satisfied Freeserve customer I much prefer the old www.merseia.fsnet.co.uk [blatant plug - the name you get is your address] system. Roll your own site rather than use a site builder tool, and no adverts. My one problem with the Fullerscopes mounts was that the mild steel shafts rusted even when kept dry. How do you get round that? -- "Forty millions of miles it was from us, more than forty millions of miles of void" |
#10
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Jonathan Silverlight wrote in message ...
Nice sites, but as a fairly satisfied Freeserve customer I much prefer the old www.merseia.fsnet.co.uk [blatant plug - the name you get is your address] system. Roll your own site rather than use a site builder tool, and no adverts. I used Mysite websites because no HTML was required. I feel too old to start learning a new computer language. With a few small niggles Mysite does all I want without much effort except patience. Those who can manage HTML have my admiration. My own opinion of my websites is rather luke warm. While I want to share the fun of owning Fullerscopes mountings and all the economic benefits. I find it difficult to make them exciting. So I have been relying on a few pretty images against the shrubbery in the garden. My one problem with the Fullerscopes mounts was that the mild steel shafts rusted even when kept dry. How do you get round that? I have the same problem. Even dew makes them rust. I plan to replace them with stainless steel when the right size turns up at work. It is only available in 5 metres lengths and in production order sizes. The effort of increasing the shaft size on the mountings themselves. With all the problems of accurately opening up the holes in the castings, wormwheels, setting circles, weights, clamps, oilite bearings etc is probably just not worth it. So I'm still hoping for some metric stainless stock very close to the original Imperial sizes. Turning down (the very tough) standard 35mm stainless steel (acid resisting) bar accurately to the original 1.25" (31.75mm) in the length required for the MkIV declination shaft would be quite an engineering challenge. Chris.B |
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