Quote:
Originally Posted by Drac0
Thanks Chris,
I believe the Quattro 150P comes with the CC so should be ok there for a start at least. Don't want to go for the 8" or 10" yet, really looking for something portable to start with, that's easy to cart to dark sites. Anything bigger will probably be relegated to home use only. Was already looking at various collimation tools. Will certainly have to find Martins post, always great advice from him & is very experienced with newts!
Cheers,
Mark
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Hi Mark,
Just read this post now , apologies
For your first Newt I would stick to a 150mm f5 or f6 ( have used both extensively)
Folk who have jumped straight into an f4 or faster seem to have all the issues for the sake of a slightly faster scope and a wider FOV mainly because they are temperamental due to the dynamics of the optical train ( unless you want to shell out big dollars on a super high end fast newt or astrograph )
f5 and f6 are easy to collimate , hold collimation well and don’t have the optical issues like severe coma to deal with ( I still used a coma corrector on my f5 and f6 scopes in any case. Initially the Baader Mk3 and in the past 2 years the TS Optics GPU )
My 8” and 10” f5 carbon fibre newts hold collimation that well I only have to tweak them during change of season. I used steel tube Newts for 6 years which worked fine but carbon fibre is the way to go particularly from 8” and up.
NB: Most Telescope retailers will always ask you “is the new scope for imaging ?” , then they direct you straight to an f4 or faster without any personal experience.
My advice is to leave the f4 until you get some experience under your belt and can afford a quality f4 later.
However it’s your choice in the end and you have to happy with that.
Good luck with everything
Clear Skies
Martin