Five long months after I ordered it, I received the scope, and I was amazed I could see thousands of stars through it that I couldn't see with the naked eye. It was great until I realized it needed a little tweaking in the alignment. I was shocked to find out there were no adjustment screws for the main mirror and the secondary was mounted in the center of the optical window, also with no adjustment screws. Sky Research was not answering my calls, so I took the scope to a local telescope shop in Tucson called The Image Point. A guy named Pierre that created the Big Foot Mount, and later his own telescopes, tried to pry the glued-in optical window apart from the tube, accidentally cracked the optical window. He offered to build me a spider and diagonal holder and that seemed to improve the performance of the scope somewhat. Here are pics of what the scope looked like before and after the optical window broke. The last pic is what the scope looked like without the optical window. The first pic is not my scope, I would never let the window get that dirty!
In 1993, I decided to re-design the scope; my first
A few years ago, I decided to refurbish: shorten the tube, strengthen the focuser area (by using a technique recommended from a fellow