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Hi
After stupidly losing the alignment on my polar alignment scope (Orion Europa 200) I decided to use the method described he http://www.celestron.com/polar.htm Everything seemed to go well. I had polaris dead centre on the crosshairs in my finderscope through a full 180 degree rotation of the scope around the Dec axis. Surely this means my finderscope optical axis is aligned with the north axis of my mount. (well close enough to the N.C.P for visual work) The problem is when I then find a target in my finderscope it is not visible through my telescope eyepiece. After finding the target in my eyepiece I then checked back to the finderscope and found it to be roughly 2 degrees out. What could still be wrong? If I have understood correctly and things are all nicely lined up surely my finderscope and eyepiece should be in union. Thanks in advance for any help. Dave. |
#2
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 12:15:39 +0100, "Davey B"
wrote: After stupidly losing the alignment on my polar alignment scope (Orion Europa 200) I decided to use the method described he http://www.celestron.com/polar.htm Everything seemed to go well. I had polaris dead centre on the crosshairs in my finderscope through a full 180 degree rotation of the scope around the Dec axis. Surely this means my finderscope optical axis is aligned with the north axis of my mount. (well close enough to the N.C.P for visual work) The problem is when I then find a target in my finderscope it is not visible through my telescope eyepiece. After finding the target in my eyepiece I then checked back to the finderscope and found it to be roughly 2 degrees out. What could still be wrong? If I have understood correctly and things are all nicely lined up surely my finderscope and eyepiece should be in union. Thanks in advance for any help. Polar alignment and finder scope alignment are not connected in any way shape or form. If you polar align your scope properly, then your equatorial mount will allow you to track a centred celestial object by moving it in RA only (i.e. no need to adjust the up/down (Dec.) component). Polar alignment is therefore used to align your mount. The finderscope on your scope is used to help you find ojbects in the night sky. It's a sighting device and needs to be aligned with respect to the main telescope. It can (and will!) get knocked and nudged out of alignment (probably quite often). It's best to get in to the habit of aligning it when you have everything outside and ready for observing - just before you start. Alignment is pretty easy. Pick a low power eyepiece for your main scope. Point the scope at a brightish star. If the finder is really out of alignment, you may have to sight along the tube to do this. With a low power eyepiece the field of view should be wide enough so that with a bit of jiggling, you can eventually see the bright star in through the main scope. Centre the star in the main scope (as near as damn it). Now switch to the finder. If the star isn't on the crosshairs, use the adjustment screws around the finder holder to adjust the position of the finder. There are normally three (sometimes more) screws that can be adjusted. Do it slowly while looking through the finder. Get used to the movement and adjust until the crosshairs are on the star. Now go back to the main scope. Notice how the star has moved off centre g. It may not have done - but often does. If it has, then re-centre in the main tube and repeat the process with the finder adjustment. If you want more accuracy, once you are happy that the finder is pretty much spot on, replace the main scope's eyepiece with a shorter focal length one. Repeat the process again. The higher the eyepiece power, the faster a star will appear to move out of the centre of the field of view (unless the scope is driven). Locating a star near to the pole reduces this effect somewhat. Polaris is more or less ideal (because it hardly moves) but is a real pig to see with an equatorial mount. -- Pete Homepage at http://www.pbl33.co.uk CCD/digicam astronomy |
#3
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![]() "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 12:15:39 +0100, "Davey B" wrote: After stupidly losing the alignment on my polar alignment scope (Orion Europa 200) I decided to use the method described he http://www.celestron.com/polar.htm Everything seemed to go well. I had polaris dead centre on the crosshairs in my finderscope through a full 180 degree rotation of the scope around the Dec axis. Surely this means my finderscope optical axis is aligned with the north axis of my mount. (well close enough to the N.C.P for visual work) The problem is when I then find a target in my finderscope it is not visible through my telescope eyepiece. After finding the target in my eyepiece I then checked back to the finderscope and found it to be roughly 2 degrees out. What could still be wrong? If I have understood correctly and things are all nicely lined up surely my finderscope and eyepiece should be in union. Thanks in advance for any help. Polar alignment and finder scope alignment are not connected in any way shape or form. If you polar align your scope properly, then your equatorial mount will allow you to track a centred celestial object by moving it in RA only (i.e. no need to adjust the up/down (Dec.) component). Polar alignment is therefore used to align your mount. The finderscope on your scope is used to help you find ojbects in the night sky. It's a sighting device and needs to be aligned with respect to the main telescope. It can (and will!) get knocked and nudged out of alignment (probably quite often). It's best to get in to the habit of aligning it when you have everything outside and ready for observing - just before you start. Alignment is pretty easy. Pick a low power eyepiece for your main scope. Point the scope at a brightish star. If the finder is really out of alignment, you may have to sight along the tube to do this. With a low power eyepiece the field of view should be wide enough so that with a bit of jiggling, you can eventually see the bright star in through the main scope. Centre the star in the main scope (as near as damn it). Now switch to the finder. If the star isn't on the crosshairs, use the adjustment screws around the finder holder to adjust the position of the finder. There are normally three (sometimes more) screws that can be adjusted. Do it slowly while looking through the finder. Get used to the movement and adjust until the crosshairs are on the star. Now go back to the main scope. Notice how the star has moved off centre g. It may not have done - but often does. If it has, then re-centre in the main tube and repeat the process with the finder adjustment. If you want more accuracy, once you are happy that the finder is pretty much spot on, replace the main scope's eyepiece with a shorter focal length one. Repeat the process again. The higher the eyepiece power, the faster a star will appear to move out of the centre of the field of view (unless the scope is driven). Locating a star near to the pole reduces this effect somewhat. Polaris is more or less ideal (because it hardly moves) but is a real pig to see with an equatorial mount. -- Pete Homepage at http://www.pbl33.co.uk CCD/digicam astronomy Thanks Pete, I already understand how to align my finderscope with a target object my problems lie with polar alignment. Let me explain a little more. While trying to learn more about my telescope I got too "fiddling" with certain bits. While fiddling I managed to move the alignment screws on the polar finder thus losing my polar alignment facility. What I needed now was a way to polar align my scope so I could re-align the polar finder. When I read the section named "Accurate Polar Alignment" on the webpage I mentioned in my initial post it seemed to be just the thing I was after. After carrying the procedure out I assumed (maybe wrongly) that it would also align my tube with my finderscope. The reason I believed this is that the mount is aligned and locked to 90 degrees Declination and polaris is centred in the finderscope crosshair for a full movement of 180 degrees around the RA axis (not Dec axis as I said in my original post). As my mount and finderscope are now pointing perfectly north I thought it was resonable to assume that they would also be aligned with each other. They were not. Hope this explains a little more what my problem is and hopefully someone can help me see where I am going wrong. One thing I did think could be causing it is - My mount IS pointing accurately at the North Celestial Pole but my finderscope is pointing at Polaris and that is where the error is (as Polaris is not located exactly at the N.C.P). Please can someone tell me if I am correct in this assumption. Dave |
#4
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 16:04:22 +0100, "Davey B"
wrote: Thanks Pete, I already understand how to align my finderscope with a target object my problems lie with polar alignment. Let me explain a little more. While trying to learn more about my telescope I got too "fiddling" with certain bits. While fiddling I managed to move the alignment screws on the polar finder thus losing my polar alignment facility. What I needed now was a way to polar align my scope so I could re-align the polar finder. When I read the section named "Accurate Polar Alignment" on the webpage I mentioned in my initial post it seemed to be just the thing I was after. After carrying the procedure out I assumed (maybe wrongly) that it would also align my tube with my finderscope. The reason I believed this is that the mount is aligned and locked to 90 degrees Declination and polaris is centred in the finderscope crosshair for a full movement of 180 degrees around the RA axis (not Dec axis as I said in my original post). As my mount and finderscope are now pointing perfectly north I thought it was resonable to assume that they would also be aligned with each other. They were not. Hope this explains a little more what my problem is and hopefully someone can help me see where I am going wrong. Davey, apologies - I should have read the article first! I was talking from the standpoint of a mount with a dedicated polar finderscope (inserted within the polar axis of the mount itself). The thought of trying to twist either of my equatorially mounted scopes to look at Polaris fills me with dread. I'll keep my mouth shut and let someone else answer who knows your scope type. -- Pete Homepage at http://www.pbl33.co.uk CCD/digicam astronomy |
#5
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![]() Davey, apologies - I should have read the article first! I was talking from the standpoint of a mount with a dedicated polar finderscope (inserted within the polar axis of the mount itself). The thought of trying to twist either of my equatorially mounted scopes to look at Polaris fills me with dread. I'll keep my mouth shut and let someone else answer who knows your scope type. -- Pete Homepage at http://www.pbl33.co.uk CCD/digicam astronomy Thanks for another speedy reply. My mount has got a dedicated polar finderscope but that is what I "fiddled" with and now it does not point north (well it does when I point it north but it is no longer aligned with the axis of my mount). I needed a method to polar align my telescope so then I can adjust the dedicated polar finder back to north so I will never have to go through this again. Lesson One: Dont fiddle with what you dont understand ![]() Dave |
#6
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 12:15:39 +0100, "Davey B"
wrote: Hi After stupidly losing the alignment on my polar alignment scope (Orion Europa 200) I decided to use the method described he http://www.celestron.com/polar.htm Everything seemed to go well. I had polaris dead centre on the crosshairs in my finderscope through a full 180 degree rotation of the scope around the Dec axis. Surely this means my finderscope optical axis is aligned with the north axis of my mount. (well close enough to the N.C.P for visual work) The problem is when I then find a target in my finderscope it is not visible through my telescope eyepiece. After finding the target in my eyepiece I then checked back to the finderscope and found it to be roughly 2 degrees out. What could still be wrong? If I have understood correctly and things are all nicely lined up surely my finderscope and eyepiece should be in union. Thanks in advance for any help. Dave. Right, You want to get your polar scope aligned with the polar axis of your telescope ? Get this manual and it will show you, its dead fiddly.... http://robert.thegeakes.co.uk/astro/...polarscope.pdf Rob |
#7
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![]() "anonymous" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 16:04:22 +0100, "Davey B" wrote: I already understand how to align my finderscope with a target object my problems lie with polar alignment. Let me explain a little more. While trying to learn more about my telescope I got too "fiddling" with certain bits. While fiddling I managed to move the alignment screws on the polar finder thus losing my polar alignment facility. What I needed now was a way to polar align my scope so I could re-align the polar finder. Can this be of any help to you? http://www.astroleague.org/al/astrnote/astnot15.html Yes it will help... thank you very much Sorry for the slow reply good old NTL news server has been down ![]() Thanks again Dave |
#8
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![]() "Robert Geake" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 12:15:39 +0100, "Davey B" wrote: Hi After stupidly losing the alignment on my polar alignment scope (Orion Europa 200) I decided to use the method described he http://www.celestron.com/polar.htm Everything seemed to go well. I had polaris dead centre on the crosshairs in my finderscope through a full 180 degree rotation of the scope around the Dec axis. Surely this means my finderscope optical axis is aligned with the north axis of my mount. (well close enough to the N.C.P for visual work) The problem is when I then find a target in my finderscope it is not visible through my telescope eyepiece. After finding the target in my eyepiece I then checked back to the finderscope and found it to be roughly 2 degrees out. What could still be wrong? If I have understood correctly and things are all nicely lined up surely my finderscope and eyepiece should be in union. Thanks in advance for any help. Dave. Right, You want to get your polar scope aligned with the polar axis of your telescope ? Get this manual and it will show you, its dead fiddly.... http://robert.thegeakes.co.uk/astro/...polarscope.pdf Rob Thanks very much Rob I will give that a go on the next clear night we have. Thanks again Dave |
#9
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![]() "Jonathan Vogt" wrote in message ... Dave this is how I aligned my Orion Europa polar scope. Dont mount the scope on the Mount , Set up the mount as normal Point the Polar scope at Polaris , centre polaris (dead centre in the cross hairs if the polar scope has them) , now looking through the polar scope rotate the axis by hand and see how polaris rotates in the scope , if it stays dead centre its aligned now if it wobbles you can align the polar scope by trial and error... Jon -- Jonathan Vogel Thank you Jonathan Will give it a try the next time we get a clear night and let you know how I get on. Thanks Dave |
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