Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited

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maguro77
Posts: 131
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2007 7:53 am
Location: West Coast

Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited

Post by maguro77 »

Hi all, I have been tweaking my Vixen polarie and Borg 45ED setup and now have the latest iteration (which is still not the final one). The set up is as follows:

Image
Vixen Polarie Set up by tuna7777, on Flickr

Equipment List
1. Manfrotto 410 Junior geared head with only two axis. I removed one axis to lighten it. Instructions to remove the third axis are here http://toast-tech.com/enjoy/s10.html. Most likely you will void your warranty by removing the axis.

2. Benro Gimbal Head (bought this used on clubsnap – a great place to look for bargains if you are fast). Got the idea from the Toast Pro mount. Pros- provides independent adjustment of the two axis for pointing the scope. Cons- adds weight, and there is a image shift when you tighten so you need to compensate. Lastly, at certain angles, one of the knobs will hit the latitude adjustment knob on the manfrotto. If you are comfortable using a regular ball head then give this a miss.

3. Vixen Polarie Star Tracker mount with Vixen Polarmeter

4. Canon 500D modded with Borg 45 ED (older f6.6 version), estimated focal length 270 mm with F 5.6 with 0.85x focal reducer 7885.

5. Laser pointer in Scopestuff mounting attached to hotshoe of camera. Great for getting to targets but can easily shift out of alignment because its secured by one footing. Also laser does not work in really cold weather. Am on the lookout for a mounting that uses a cable to turn on the laser so that you arent fiddling with the laser.

6. Right angle view finder attached to the camera viewfinder. On many occasions, the camera is upside down, and this view finder fell out. Mine has a cracked glass internally but still usable. Is useful for framing and focusing with your eyes.

Total Weight of above equipment plus tripod, a couple of eyepieces, batteries, chargers, cables, small diagonal comes up to 7.1 kg. Most airline allow max 23 kg one piece, so this will take up 1/3 of your total weight.

If you add netbook which I used for Backyard EOS program to check for drift alignment, it will add another 1.5 kg to your total weight.

I had a chance to try this setup recently in New Zealand and with a limited time given, took the following two pictures. Subs were acquired using Backyard EOS which costs $$ money to buy (http://www.backyardeos.com/) and stacked in Deep Sky Stacker which is Free (download here http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/DeepSkyStacker/
Learn how to use it here http://asignobservatoryii.webs.com/tutorials.htm)

The photos were taken at Wild Earth Lodge B&B , Makarora Valley, South Island, NZ. They have a self contained converted barn that can sleep 6 persons. Great views and great hosts!

Large magellanic cloud and tarantula nebulba – Total exposure 12 mins with 40 sec subs at ISO 1600. This image is as you see taken with the Borg ED45 at 270 mm fl. No cropping.

Image
Large Magellanic Cloud and Tarantula Nebula by tuna7777, on Flickr

Horsehead and Flame Nebula
Total exposure 14 mins, 60 sec subs at ISO 3200

Image
Horsehead and Flame Nebula by tuna7777, on Flickr

Both pictures are not ideal – as they are grainy and could do with more and longer subs, lower ISO but this wasn’t an astrophoto trip and I didn’t have a lot of time. It didn’t help that the sun sets at 10 pm and I have to be up early in the morning.

But I am hopeful that I can get better subs as the alignment to the southern pole was done on the rough and I did not drift align at all. For Part 2 of my post, I will describe the steps I took to get the rough polar alignment. When I do get a chance next time, I will drift align for longer subs.
Last edited by maguro77 on Thu Feb 21, 2013 10:12 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Gary
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Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited Part

Post by Gary »

Beautiful setup and photos! Thanks for sharing.
http://www.astro.sg
email: gary[at]astro.sg
twitter: @astrosg


"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
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Bergkamp_
Posts: 1581
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 11:31 pm
Favourite scope: Telescope that i can bring out
Location: Singapore, Bukit Panjang

Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited Part

Post by Bergkamp_ »

thanks for the sharing ! [smilie=angel2.gif]
Wee Ern aRmeD wiF Telescope reAdY tO taKe ovEr thE skY .. wIF jUst mY naKed eYEs .
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cataclysm
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Joined: Mon Aug 29, 2005 11:23 pm

Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited Part

Post by cataclysm »

Awesome! I like the setup, minimalist but to a point of perfection! :P
kochu
Posts: 817
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 9:51 pm
Favourite scope: Sharpstar-107PH Triplet.
Location: Jurong West

Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited

Post by kochu »

Hi Joyce, You have a unique style in choosing equipment.
Good results.
Keep it coming.
Kochu/21-2-13
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starfinder
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Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited

Post by starfinder »

Hi Maguro77, thanks for sharing the know-how on the set-up, and in such detail too!

Yes, weight is often an issue for overseas trips with astro gear. When I made my astro trip to Tammin (Perth region) last year, I had to weigh every single item including eyepieces, charts, lenses, clothes etc and then calculate the possible totals. It helped that Qantas' limit for checked-in baggage is 23kg, which may soon increase to 30kg to be in line with Emirates: http://mobile.news.com.au/travel/news/q ... 6576266380
SIA is still behind the market at 20kg, and they charge a premium for Singapore origin flights. Hello, SIA are you listening?

It's been about 10 yrs since I was last in New Zealand. Might want to go there again soon for stars, mountains and birds, and if I do, will look into the B&B you mentioned. I recall that when I was staying at Mt Cook Village, the night skies were dry and crystal clear. But as it was winter then (early August) it was shiveringly cold! Brrr... we have it so comfortable in the tropics.
maguro77
Posts: 131
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2007 7:53 am
Location: West Coast

Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited Part

Post by maguro77 »

Thanks guys for the encouraging comments!

@Cataclysm: Still havent got my act together - perfection is when I can get the elusive 3 to 4 min subs and reduce the weight to 6 kg... must practice more on alignment.

@Starfinder: I am obsessed with weight and use my kitchen scale to weigh all my astro gear. NZ weather is infamous and it can change very quickly - although I went in summer, there was fresh snow overnight on the hill tops behind where we stayed. The plus point is there arent any snakes and yucky venomous stuff so i feel very safe trudging around in the dark.
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yltansg
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Favourite scope: Borg 76 + Solar Scope SF50
Location: Bukit Batok

Re: Vixen Polarie and Borg 45ED Travel Setup Revisited

Post by yltansg »

Hi Joyce,

This is a great setup. Last year June I brought your Megrez 90 and a Vixen gp mount to Solvenia. The Vixen Polarie will be my choice for next imaging trip. Thanks for sharing.

Alfred
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