Suggestions for a Home-Built Telescope
hodet asks: "I would like to know if anyone here has built or are planning to build their own telescope. My plan right now is to build an 8" F/6 Dobsonion Reflector based on these plans. The same design can also be found here. The base has been cut and the primary and secondary mirrors are to be ordered shortly. Since I plan on making a few modifications to this design I'd like to know if anyone here has done anything similar or totally original and what thoughts and suggestions you may have. I know it may be cheaper and easier to buy one from Meade, but that's not what I'm looking for."
can be found at dumbo
Although a few might be outdated.
Good luck.
Instead of making a focuser, you might be happy buying a really nice one instead. Out of everything you put on the scope, the focuser and the mount will be either a source of pleasure, or a source of annoyance. A good focuser will make it much easier to get the best views of the stars, and proper balance and stability of the mount will make it easier to point the scope.
It really makes a difference, more than anything else.
http://www.scsastro.co.uk/it060013.htm
This is America, damnit. Speak Spanish!
Dad has a 13" dob. He put kid's bike tires on it. To move it, he locks the tube in the base with a wing nut and bolt, then tips the whole thing over onto the wheels.
Before this, when I was in high school, he would wake me up at 3 am to help him put the scope away. (now I'm 32)
Joe
Joe Batt Solid Design
There are some interesting photos and information on Tom Droege's TASS site. Not sure how active they are at the moment, but there are some knowledgeable people there.
I beg to differ - the mount is very important also. Top-of-the-line optics won't do you much good if you can't aim the telescope because it's all attached to a shaky mount. The dob mount design itself is solid - just don't skimp on the materials used to build it.
Sincerely,
a guy who recently bought a telescope with a shaky mount
Build the scope yourself, don't spend all that much money on the focuser (better yet make your own focuser) and spend the saved dough on additional eyepieces. You can get a "better" focuser later.
A 6-inch f/8 scope is a wonderful starter - much better then the junk you find in stores. Hundreds of deep sky objects, craters on the moon, moons of Jupiter and rings are Saturn are all easy to see.
Final advise. Locate and join your local astronomy club, go to a regional star party (can you find both here and get out under dark skies.. sorry, this requires getting out of the city.
Good luck, and have fun!
Depending on your fabrication skills and facilities, you might also want to look into a truss dobson (probably not necessary at 8"), or a split ring mount. The split ring mount is an equatorial mount, making it easy to add a motor to track objects against the earth's rotation. Even if you want to learn the sky for yourself (rather than use a goto system), tracking is very very useful, particularly when sharing the views with others. The split ring also avoids field-rotation at the eyepiece allowing long exposure astro-photography using film or digital cameras.
I started out with a 10" meade starfinder dob, rebuilt it as a truss scope (goto), then rebuilt it as a split ring (motorized but not goto). The Meade starfinder design is very similar to the one you referenced, and is by far the easiest to build.
Be aware that astronomy is a disease, I don't know anyone who uses a telescope regularly and only owns a single telescope.
Dean
The fast majority of homebuilt telescopes are built using glass, pyrex or zerodur (all glasses of various compositions) mirrors. All newtonian telescopes f/8 or slower can sometimes be made with spherical mirrors, everything faster than that requires a parabolic mirror.
Many amateurs polish their own mirrors. A great project if you have the time, and a great project if you have kids, but you'd have to be working at a McJob to come close to breaking even on the time vs purchasing a prefab mirror.
I know you're planning to buy your primary mirror, but you might like to read Ed Grinds a Mirror from Ed Ting's excellent astronomy site. Also, if you ever need advice on production scopes and accessories (like eyepieces), Ed's site is the place to go.