Got a complete Tasco 1959 7TE 60mm Refractor in original box with all accessories along with a whole bunch of books with some other stuff for $20.Did i do good?
Yeah, it's pretty good. It's not a free Takahashi but it's good. https://www.scopereviews.com/Tasco1.html
>watch an astronomy programme when I was young>ask for a telescope for my Birthday>get it>stars still look like tiny specksThe moon looked good but apart from that I didn't get it.
>fluorite Takahashi 76mm>point at stars>stars are perfect points and sometimes different colours>and sometimes made up of multiple sometimes different colour stars>space is beatiful but also horrifying>heh
>>2838213.... What were you expecting to see?
>buy myself a 5" mak reflector and wifi/goto az mount>2 different stores fuck me around, have to pay for it twice and get a refund from the 2nd place >Jupiter goes out of view for the next 6 months>saturns rings move into same plane as earth, won't be visible again for years>can't see mars for shit with this 23mm eyepiece that came with it >4th optics store takes my money and doesn't ship the 10mm eyepiece for 3 months >now mars is out of view for months>nothing but stars right now, since I can't stay up all night during work week>cloudy for the last 9 weeksI'm just tired man, why do optics stores all have to be such cunts
>>2838372Can't you just buy eyepieces from amazon to get you by? I regularly buy cheap telescopes from yard sales that are missing them and get them working for $15-20, they aren't great eye pieces but they work and usually come in sets.
So how do i attach a camera to this?
>>2838390If you want to photograph anything darker than the moon you need an auto-tracking rig specifically made for astrophotography so you can take long exposures as the Earth rotates. It's very expensive and complicated unfortunately.
>>2838364
>>2838402Actually i don't, it's for long range terrestrial photography. There are several lakes where i am (Northern Maine) where Cougars have allegedly been spotted in the winter eating scraps out on the ice but no one has gotten a good shot of them.
>>2838410Oh, I assumed astrophotography for some reason. That's a lot simpler then, you can get mounts for DSLR cameras that hook up where the eyepeice goes. They're usually called T-Rings. You can /diy/ one also since it's just a tube basically.
>>2838412Neighbors kid got paralyzed from the chest down. He loves the outdoors so we are thinking of something cool he could do. We are thinking of setting him up in a heated ice shack and putting out bait a mile or so out onto the ice. He can work the fine adjustments so he could scan the whole lake, especially it it had a digital camera with a screen.We have the idea to put a row of 2, 4 and 6 foot range poles behind the sites so we can prove the size and that it isn't a big bobcat but really is a mountain lion.One of the ideas was to put a IR monocle between the camera and telescope so we could take night shots. We would put angled reflective plates on top of the range poles with IR glowsticks on them, the idea is it would back light the bait spots without directly being in line of sight of the camera.
>>2838372>cloudy for the last 9 weeks>can't see Mars for shitwelcome to astronomy lol
>>2838373I don't buy anything from Amazon, no exceptions. also Ausfail
>60mm
>>2838420Hope you have a son of your own some day
>>2838598Eh, i'm already 50 and i would be a shitty dad.
Thinking of getting pic related
I'd like to get a nice telescope someday but this one was free and I have an adapter to put my camera on it. Works well enough for now. It's a fixed 900MM lens.
>>2838689It takes nice moon shots. I still need to get out of town and use it to take some actual good pictures. Just haven't gotten around to it yet.
>>2838681These are great
>>2838707I'm torn between getting an 8 or a 10 because it seems almost everyone ends up upgrading to a 10" or more anyway.
>>2838709Scratch that, found a Saxon on sale for $120 cheaper, so tempting to get one now and be broke for a while.
>>2838690It's amazing what you can do just aiming a smart phone camer down the eyepiece. Here's one I got of the moon
>>2838712I didn't have a moon filter so this actually so bright it hurt to look at with the naked eyeAnd here's one of the sun with a sun filter, this was cool to look at
>>2838712Mine is an actual camera connected to the telescope. Unfortunately it's kinda hard to get the focus just right with the tiny camera screen plus I suck at photography. >>2838713I've only done the sun with heavy filters that are darker than a welding mask. Not through the telescope though.
>>2838712Not bad, this is from an old cheap Fuji digital camera with telescopic zoom
>>2838210I saw the rings of Saturn for the first time via one like it. A couple years later I bought, secondhand, a 6" F8 Newtonian with a heavy equatorial mount. I suppose my favorite sight in it was M11.
>>2838971It was also pretty nice for projecting detailed images of the sun, and came with a screen that mounted conveniently to it.
Super crappy pic of Jupiter and three of Galilean moons. iPhone held up to the eyepiece in a Explore Scientific ar102 refractor.
>>2839483looks like 4
I had an 8incher for a while.You start seeing colors in the belt of Orion with that.
>>2840859>I had an 8incher for a while
>>2840946More like inches for that part.But the size really doesn't matter that much.Once you can do simple tasks like find the clitoris, you're already in the top 10%.Regarding telescopes. For Astronomy.It's not that much about the ability to zoom in, it's more how much light you can catch.Also, due to how our eyes are built, with more light, above a certain threshold, comes color.Otherwise, as you probably know, human low-light vision is exclusively black and white.With the optical 8incher, if pointed at the well known Orion Nebula, I would, albeit faint, see a bunch of colors. Fields of them, some more red, or blue, or green.So, a mild success I would say.Now, if you take the hobby seriously, you turn all the lights in your home of 30 minutes before the action, the telescope has been outside for some hours to acclimate, you set your personal digital device to a skymap and red-only light.Red light does not ruin night vision.Then you may sit outside for hours, without moving much.So you'll also learn which pieces of your Garderobe are good at keeping you warm.Have fun.
>>2838372back in the day astronomers would move to a town and live there and wait YEARS because they knew they that in 10 years if you looked from a certain place on earth at a certain time you would see somethingastrofags are mentally ill
>>2841589You're not expressing that information in a way that makes me think that you have no mental problems.Sounds more like a cult.That you kinda were part of.
>>2838710>>2838681These are actually quite good for starting out
>>2842354fuck off phone poster.