Just as any new scope's arrival, it brought in the rain. It rained heavily the day before it landed in Singapore and even heavier when it landed. I remembered i received it on a Friday, and unboxed it that night. and a thing i realised, instead of getting alot of peanut foam pellets, i got a package stuffed with newspaper. alot of newspaper.. if i could read japanese, i would know the headlines of the happenings..
It is made of wood, with aluminum side plates. painted black, i was expecting an aluminum box but turn out it was mainly wood.
Aperture: 250mm / ~10"
Focal Len: 1250mm
Focuser: Helical
Finder:Rigel quickfinder
The instructions were fully in japanese and i could only try to follow the pictures and guess where things are suppose to go. everything was in parts and screws and i put it together, took it apart when things dont match. and after 45 mins of tinkering i finally got the scope assembled. Half way thru, i wanted to give up and went to youtube to see if there was any guide, although there is, but i couldnt find it. i even went to email Kasai for help to see if they had an English version. he came back to me the next day saying there isnt. and sent me the youtube guide. after the assembling, i collimated the scope. since it is a helical, after using the sight tube to align, i rotated the helical and found that the it is not perfectly centered. quite close though, since i am not aiming for perfect collimation, i left it be and collimated the primary mirror. and i found that it is a very good exercise as i was doing squats. stood to check the collimation and squatted to collimate the primary mirror.
it was about 1 am plus close to 2 and Antares has risen quite high and the tail is very visible. i popped in the 42mm kneller and looked near the tail of Scorpius and lo and behold, the M7, it was such a sight. framed just nicely in the view. its views are sharp and stars are pinpoint.
The movement of the scope is buttery smooth.
that was the only thing i saw that day and decided to disassemble the scope before sleeping. first time disassembling it was easy as it was just unscrewing everything. when it came into packing it into the box, it was a headache. i had to take everything out then put it back a couple of times not knowing what was jutting out from where to prevent the top cover from closing properly. finally i managed to close it not really knowing why.
over the course of the 2 weeks, i packed and unpacked the Reise 3 times and finally found the trick to packing it. so that the lid could be closed.
What i like:
Weighing at 13kg, a light considering it is a 10" dob. Main weight is the mirror.
packs into a single box.
curved vane for the secondary mirror.
segmented truss rods
ingenious method of using the light cover to be mirror cover duing assembly.
nice way of securing the secondary.
buttery smooth control
What i dont like:
too many screws and nuts - easy to lose when dropped. esp in the dark.
need abit of light to assemble the scope. if no red lights, will disrupt the dark adapted eyes.
no shroud. not necessary if obbing in dark areas.
hard to pack n run in case of sudden showers.
uses spring tension to hold scope in place. cant go too low. spring will lift the scope up. esp when changing ep.
need to check collimation after assembling.
here are some of my unboxing pictures..
