I'm very surprised how much dynamic range the new FLIR camera has! This shot was easy, framing and centering the references was the only hard work.
Enjoy and thanks for looking!
I'm very surprised how much dynamic range the new FLIR camera has! This shot was easy, framing and centering the references was the only hard work.
Enjoy and thanks for looking!
I swear everyone woke up on their own, dad didn't wake anyone!
Little 2x boys and I got to see some of the early part on our street and the rest via a quick trip to the community pool.
Full res here - https://imgur.com/gallery/99xY4PU
Enjoy!
As the planets began to sink lower in declination and altitude the opportunities to observe and get high resolution photographs became more challenging. In hind sight it was easy to blame poor seeing and weather on increasingly poor results. A few key people in my life pointed out that things didn't look as sharp as before and I had no reason to blame anything other than the weather. When someone with similar equipment really spent time with me, comparing our results it was only then did I think to dig deeply to my issue.
Turn to Cloudy Nights and this long post - https://www.cloudynights.com/topic/842366-defocused-star-test-questions/
After back and forth I had a good guess it was astigmatism based on some star tests showing a cross shape.
I formed a game plan to isolate and break down to the lowest common denominator. I researched the links that the great folks on CloudyNights shared. I took the cooling unit out almost immediately for two reasons. First reason being I only have 2 of 3 working TEC Peltiers, meaning the cooling is already imbalanced. Secondly I had automated the whole thing - https://astromaphilli14.blogspot.com/2022/09/automated-telescope-cooling-with.html so that was disappointing. After these fixes didn't help I became worried that my mirror cell(s) were in need of replacing but I planned the following:
After reading this article in particular - http://www.loptics.com/articles/starshape/starshape.html, "Fifth condition: For this article, we are assuming that your mirror cell is properly designed and set up, including the edge support of the mirror. If your optics are glued to the cell, then you cannot easily rotate them to help rule out some possible causes of non-round stars. Gluing a mirror (other than a small secondary) to a cell made of something other than glass will often cause it to warp as the cell shrinks by a different amount and pulls on the mirror, creating optical problems. I do not recommend gluing large mirrors to their cells/holders, as it will often cause non-round stars. If your primary mirror and or large secondary mirror is glued to something, I recommend finding a way to mount it without glue, and then coming back to this article if problems remain."
Guess what I did? I glued it.
Still I planed to break down my issue into the following steps.
At step three I noticed that my star was very round which to me meant some stress ON the mirror, not the mirror itself. I was convinced it was the mirror cell or the glue holding it to the cell.
I started the process of discovering how to fix the cell and what options I had. It does NOT seem that the ATM (Amateur Telescope Making) market for mirror cells is very well populated. I started to think about how I could make my own modifications to the existing cell I had. I took the whole assembly out to take some measurements. Upon disassembly I noticed some metal on metal rubbing of parts such as here:
This is similar to a
pinching problem I had long ago and essentially the design of the whole area
pictured above, from the length of the screws pressing against the mirror back
to the white plastic spacers needed improvements. It just so happens that in my searching for
some washers or spacers did I find that I already had the perfect tool for this
job, hard Rubber screw bumpers!
After installing it looks like this.
And looks like this for results.
Next up is build some good habits of stellar collation to augment the cat's eye system I use!
Clear Skies,
Mike
PS The following is a dump of other references
I yanked the newly automated cooling unit out as I suspected uneven cooling was killing the mirror shape. It did not seem to fix... onto #2...
Seeing was pretty poor for star tests last couple times I was out. I had the scope out last night really just to test some fixes for my astigmatism. Not sure you saw my last email or CN post in reflectors.
My photo from 20221006 or 08; showing bad astig
My photo from 20221016 -pointing nearly to zenith and mildly out of collimation
I went through some changes like these…
There is a threaded slot in the rocker on the left of the below image that holds the cell to the rockers. On the right cell has a bolt hole with 'rubber gasket' that protects stress of the bolt on the treaded rockers on the left. . I noticed the screw heads that shouldered in gaskets in place were making contact to the metal and caused some stress marks!
Added a screw bumper to bolts, in between the cell and rockers:
Placement
Installed