I left out a word it should be - as long as there is *no* physical contact
between - etc.

Don

Dr E D F Williams

http://personal.inet.fi/cool/don.williams
Author's Web Site and Photo Gallery
Updated: March 30, 2002


----- Original Message -----
From: "Keith Whaley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, November 04, 2002 3:22 PM
Subject: Re: OT: Re: Eclipse


>
>
> Dr E D F Williams wrote:
> >
> > JC,
> >
> > I wish my 400mm Sigma APO produced results as sharp!
> >
> > If by mirror lens you mean something made specifically as a telephoto
for
> > terrestrial photography then your aversion to them may be justified. But
> > consider the two Questars - 3.5" and 7".
> > These are far superior to any telephoto that has ever been offered for
> > sale to the public.
>
> This statement is without dispute. Questar hand figures their optics
> as individual sets, for each and every instrument they build, to
> _exceed_ the usually recognized standards or 'limits' of astronomical
> telescope resolution. I know of no telescope available to the general
> public, as Don indicates, that is made to such exacting criteria.
>
> I once had a 3.5" Questar, and it was so good, I was able to pick up
> on the vibrations from cars passing by and others walking thru the
> house... I had a very stout and stiff tripod, but it was the floor the
> tripod was sitting on that was my problem. With other telescopes, you
> couldn't notice it, mainly bacause you were power limited. Crank up
> the power and very soon the image starts deteriorating badly, but with
> the Questar, you could actually USE the power, if you could view thru
> the eyepiece without touching the mount or instrument in any way! <grin>
> Lovely instruments, with a price to match...
>
> keith whaley
>
> > Every time you
> > see the launch of the space shuttle on TV its been taken though a 7"
Questar
> > specially adapted for the job - or so I've read anyway. I used the small
one
> > in my laboratory and sometimes out in the field. I have none of those
> > slides, but I'm sure there are samples to be seen on the Questar web
site.
> >
> > However, if you want sharp pictures with a Questar, or any really long
> > telephoto for that matter, you need to go to extraordinary, and
tiresome,
> > lengths to get sharp pictures at high magnification. All the precautions
> > used in photomicrography have to be applied. In a nutshell - as long as
> > there is direct physical connection between the camera and the optics,
half
> > the battle is won. However, each part can be fastened to the same
vibration
> > free base. The shutter should either be replaced by an external one, or
the
> > exposure should be long - or very short indeed.
> >
> > Don
>
>


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