Tele Vue
- smp
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Tele Vue
smp
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Telescopes: Questar 3.5 Standard SN 18-11421; Stellina (EAA); Vespera II (EAA)
Solar: Thousand Oaks white light filter; Daystar Quark (chromosphere) Hα filter
Mounts: Explore Scientific Twilight I; Majestic heavy duty tripod
Local Club: New Hampshire Astronomical Society
- bladekeeper
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Re: Tele Vue
Scopes: Apertura AD12 f/5; Celestron C6-R f/8; ES AR127 f/6.4; Stellarvue SV102T f/7; iOptron MC90 f/13.3; Orion ST80A f/5; ES ED80 f/6; Celestron Premium 80 f/11.4; Celestron C80 f/11.4; Unitron Model 142 f/16; Meade NG60 f/10
Mounts: Celestron AVX; Bresser EXOS-2; ES Twilight I; ES Twilight II; iOptron Cube-G; AZ3/wood tripod; Vixen Polaris
Binoculars: Pentax PCF WP II 10×50, Bresser Corvette 10×50, Bresser Hunter 16×50 and 8×40, Garrett Gemini 12×60 LW, Gordon 10×50, Apogee 20×100
- smp
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Re: Tele Vue
smp
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Telescopes: Questar 3.5 Standard SN 18-11421; Stellina (EAA); Vespera II (EAA)
Solar: Thousand Oaks white light filter; Daystar Quark (chromosphere) Hα filter
Mounts: Explore Scientific Twilight I; Majestic heavy duty tripod
Local Club: New Hampshire Astronomical Society
- helicon
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Re: Tele Vue
Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8 on Celestron Heavy Duty Alt Az mount, KOWA 90mm spotting scope
Binoculars: Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50
Eyepieces: Various, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Celestron 25mm Plossl
Camera: ZWO ASI 120
Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs
Latitude: 48.7229° N
- smp
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Re: Tele Vue
No, not me. I get all nervous when a little bit of dew starts to form. Unfortunately or not, I’m far too worried about keeping my equipment in perfect shape to ever consider leaving it out overnight.
smp
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Telescopes: Questar 3.5 Standard SN 18-11421; Stellina (EAA); Vespera II (EAA)
Solar: Thousand Oaks white light filter; Daystar Quark (chromosphere) Hα filter
Mounts: Explore Scientific Twilight I; Majestic heavy duty tripod
Local Club: New Hampshire Astronomical Society
- Ben Cartwright SASS
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Re: Tele Vue
Ferengi Rule of Acquisition #59
Free advice is seldom cheap
"Sometimes having is not so pleasing as wanting, it's not logical but it is true"
Commander Spock
Canon DSLR's R7, R6II, 5D, 7D2, 90D 21 lenses incl. 100-400L mk ii, 70-200L mk iii f/2.8, RF600/11
Lunt LS50 DS, LS80 DS, Lunt 102ED, Stellarvue SV80 APO, Orion ST80, 127 MAK, Skywatcher Evostar 120ED, 102 MAK, Celestron 8" Edge HD, 102AZ
Skywatcher EQ6-R Pro
ZWO ASI071MC-cool, ASI174mm, ASI174mm-cool, ASI178MC-cool, ASI290 mini, ASI120MM-S, ASI120MC Revolution Player One mm (178 chip)
- Rainmaker
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Re: Tele Vue
I wish we got some snow at home......Ben Cartwright SASS wrote: ↑Mon May 20, 2019 12:23 am Nice setup! I leave my mount and often my scope(s) out year round, I use two Telegizmo 365 covers (tripod cover and scope cover) also a Orion scope cover over the tripod cover and under the scope cover
The Telegizmo covers are fantastic. I just had a custom one made for my big scope and plan to get others made once I decide on a permanent setup.
Rainmaker “Excalibur” 18” F3.5 +SIPS @ 1860mm
TMB-LZOS 152mm F7.9 @ 1200mm
Takahashi FOA 60mm F8.8
Takahashi FC76DC F7.5
Skylight AR101.15
- Ben Cartwright SASS
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Re: Tele Vue
Funny how people who don't have to shovel the shi+ always say that! Imagine it is 0 Centigrade and there is a 20 MPH wind blowing and it is raining and you have to shovel a foot or two of snow and you are out there for an hour or two getting soaked to the bone... Yes it is pretty when it is coming down but not nice when you have to shovel it. Or you have a 45 minute drive home from work on a normal day and while you are at work you get a foot of snow and now it takes you 6 hours to go that 45 minute drive - it has happened where I used to work! Or you get snowed into your house for 5-7 days, hope you keep enough food in the house because you aren't getting out no matter how hungry you are.
but what really gets me are the cold temps and windchills we are usually 5 degrees F at night and the windchill can be -20 F (-15C and -28C windchill) that makes it tough to observe OF COURSE THE BRIGHT SIDE IS YOU DON'T NEED A COOLED CAMERA!
Ferengi Rule of Acquisition #59
Free advice is seldom cheap
"Sometimes having is not so pleasing as wanting, it's not logical but it is true"
Commander Spock
Canon DSLR's R7, R6II, 5D, 7D2, 90D 21 lenses incl. 100-400L mk ii, 70-200L mk iii f/2.8, RF600/11
Lunt LS50 DS, LS80 DS, Lunt 102ED, Stellarvue SV80 APO, Orion ST80, 127 MAK, Skywatcher Evostar 120ED, 102 MAK, Celestron 8" Edge HD, 102AZ
Skywatcher EQ6-R Pro
ZWO ASI071MC-cool, ASI174mm, ASI174mm-cool, ASI178MC-cool, ASI290 mini, ASI120MM-S, ASI120MC Revolution Player One mm (178 chip)
- Altocumulus Online
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Re: Tele Vue
I do what I do because I can, and because I want to.
It doesn't mean I know what I'm doing
- smp
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Re: Tele Vue
I strongly agree! Snow is great if you don't have any and you can travel a distance to go and appreciate it or play in it. Otherwise, as a fellow New Englander, I say it should stay away!Ben Cartwright SASS wrote: ↑Mon May 20, 2019 1:41 pm Funny how people who don't have to shovel the [stuff] always say that!
smp
- - - - -
Telescopes: Questar 3.5 Standard SN 18-11421; Stellina (EAA); Vespera II (EAA)
Solar: Thousand Oaks white light filter; Daystar Quark (chromosphere) Hα filter
Mounts: Explore Scientific Twilight I; Majestic heavy duty tripod
Local Club: New Hampshire Astronomical Society
- Lady Fraktor
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Re: Tele Vue
The only culture I have is from yogurt
- Rainmaker
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Re: Tele Vue
I lived in central Finland for 13 years and in the Australian Alps for 5 years, I dare say I have seen some snow and cold weather, I think Minus 40ºC was about the coldest...... Bring it On !!!Ben Cartwright SASS wrote: ↑Mon May 20, 2019 1:41 pmFunny how people who don't have to shovel the shi+ always say that! Imagine it is 0 Centigrade and there is a 20 MPH wind blowing and it is raining and you have to shovel a foot or two of snow and you are out there for an hour or two getting soaked to the bone... Yes it is pretty when it is coming down but not nice when you have to shovel it. Or you have a 45 minute drive home from work on a normal day and while you are at work you get a foot of snow and now it takes you 6 hours to go that 45 minute drive - it has happened where I used to work! Or you get snowed into your house for 5-7 days, hope you keep enough food in the house because you aren't getting out no matter how hungry you are.
but what really gets me are the cold temps and windchills we are usually 5 degrees F at night and the windchill can be -20 F (-15C and -28C windchill) that makes it tough to observe OF COURSE THE BRIGHT SIDE IS YOU DON'T NEED A COOLED CAMERA!
Rainmaker “Excalibur” 18” F3.5 +SIPS @ 1860mm
TMB-LZOS 152mm F7.9 @ 1200mm
Takahashi FOA 60mm F8.8
Takahashi FC76DC F7.5
Skylight AR101.15
- Caldwell 14
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Re: Tele Vue
Mount: TV Gibraltar HD4
Oculars: TV 3 mm - 6 mm Nagler Zoom, 7mm, 9mm, 13mm Delite, 32mm Plossl
Filter: TV Nebustar Bandmate UHC
- messier 111
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Re: Tele Vue
REFRACTOR , TS-Optics Doublet SD-APO 125 mm f/7.8 . Lunt 80mm MT Ha Doublet Refractor .
EYEPIECES, Delos , Delite and 26mm Nagler t5 , 2 zoom Svbony 7-21 , Orion Premium Linear BinoViewer .
FILTER , Nebustar 2 tele vue . Apm solar wedge . contrast booster 2 inches .
Mounts , cg-4 motorized , eq6 pro belt drive .
“Your assumptions are your windows on the world. Scrub them off every once in a while, or the light won't come in.”
― Isaac Asimov
Jean-Yves
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