My New Telescope

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It was just my birthday.  I got a new telescope.  It is a Maksutov-Cassegrain 90 mm reflecting scope, and the coolest part is that it has GPS.

 

When it came in two boxes and I laid all the pieces out on the floor, I knew I would be challenged.  Putting things together is not my strong point and the way the instructions were written it presumed that you knew something about telescopes, which I did not.  But after a few tries my telescope looked like the picture on the instructions.

 

Now I had to program the GPS.  Not too hard, I thought, once I determined my exact latitude and longitude, where due south was (azimuth of 180 degrees, for the uninitiated), and whether I was ahead or behind of Universal Time (UT),and if so by how much (300 minutes, it turns out).   Now I was ready. 

 

Finally there was a clear sky and I dragged my telescope out on our deck in the freezing cold.  I found due south with a compass and knew that Jupiter was out that night.  I selected Jupiter on my hand control, but the telescope did not move.  It was not working.  Upon further examination I realized I only put batteries in one side of the battery pack.  I hadn't noticed there were two sides.  No problem, I would just plug it into to an outlet.  

 

 I tried again, and the device told me that Jupiter would not rise for another four hours.  I randomly tried another planet, Venus, and suddenly the mount whirred and turned and tilted the scope - right towards the back of the house into my dining room.  I was pretty sure Venus was not in there.  After a few more tries the freezing cold dark night got the best of me and I decided to give it go another night.

 

The next morning I examined my telescope and found that the date, time and latitude and longitude I had programmed the day before had not been saved.  No wonder Venus was in my kitchen.

 

I have tried again, and without much success.  Stars are tiny in the sky and hard to pinpoint with accuracy.  But there are over 3,000 stars, constellations, galaxies, asteriods programmed into my GPS, some with names like Syrma and Zaniah, or Polaris and Kaus Borealis.  There are double stars too.   I hope I can figure this out and I can see them.  The moon has not been out the past week, but it is coming back - that will be easy to find.   Then I will try Venus and Jupiter again.

Comments

Fred Klein

Sounds like "Rear Window" to me. Which reminds me, Story Week is approaching...

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Sat, 11/30/2013 - 23:28

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Good luck. I always thought telescopes were neat. Winter seems a delightful time (if cold) to see the "wonders of the universe." Bring out the hot chocolate and enjoy.
Corey Bearak

Enjoy.
I face my down tech issue. Got an Apple TV after Thanksgiving dinner -- brought my dad-in-law along before driving him home (very nearby). I did not buy a HDMI cable which I later learned I needed (and I did not want to disconnect the one connect the cable to the Telly). Jonathan thought he have an extra which he'd give me a Chanukah last night at my niece's in Hoboken. He could not find it without creating a mess that he was trying to obliterate. Thus this morning before football I plan to purchase one unless the price well exceeds what Jonathan get produce via Amazon with shipment arrival on Tuesday. With Football and Walking Dead tonight, the need to set up is more about getting it done as opposed to needing to view something.
Rona Gura

Very cool. I love telescopes. Its amazing to see what's out there..

Submitted by Janet_Adler on Sun, 12/01/2013 - 07:27

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Janet Adler

So cool. I got one for my birthday too but I only use it to watch boats. Now I know it can look up I'll see if I can see stars I cannot see...makes sense to me. BTW, Venus is ALWAYS in your kitchen......

Submitted by Jeanne_Anne_Norton on Mon, 12/02/2013 - 03:47

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Jeanne Anne Norton

Wish we had a telescope. But, alas, all we have are binoculars. Let us know your reaction to seeing Venus and Jupiter up close and personal through your Maksutov-Cassegrain 90 mm reflecting scope with GPS. Have loads of fun.

Submitted by giaheeg on Tue, 12/03/2013 - 11:03

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Gia Heeg

It may not help you see anything closer, but there is a very cool ipad app that at least tells you what you are looking at. Star chart. It is free, and to take it outside in the night mode you can hold it up to the sky and it shows the names and positions of all the stars you are looking at. Fun.

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