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One of the LARGEST Amateur Visual Telescopes on Earth!!!! 70-inch Aperture! 

Maximum Astronomy
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One of the largest amateur telescopes lives just outside Salt Lake City. 70-inches in diameter! Huge! Mike Clements takes us on a tour of his hand built 70" Newtonian reflector style telescope. Mike made this out of inspiration from an old satellite blank that never made it to actual space use. This is one of the largest amateur telescopes available to the public on the Earth and it lives probably close enough to some of you! This telescope has been talked about and featured in numerous articles and forums across the globe.
******ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY EXPECTATIONS******: It’s not just that simple with this telescope and I know a lot of people have asked. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This a common problem and it can be overcome with short exposures with focal lengths under 1500mm generally. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and magnification. For example, using a 40mm eyepiece is already 275x magnification. Most telescopes like a C11 can’t use 275x on some nights due to atmospheric turbulence. And this marvel, that’s the LOWEST it can go. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. You will never be able to get short enough exposures, track precisely enough and avoid the atmosphere to get a clear and sharp photo 99% of the time. Even with a smartphone. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only and that is what it’s best at. I understand this may disappoint some folks, but we must respect his hard work and dedication on a part of the hobby he desires the most. His love is visual, not photographic.
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15 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 309   
@CometAurora
@CometAurora Год назад
bros using an 8 inch telescope as a view finder
@mjproebstle
@mjproebstle 10 месяцев назад
scope is so big its spotting scope has a spotting scope
@Gigaspace-vu6uu
@Gigaspace-vu6uu 9 месяцев назад
Lol
@Jordi0868
@Jordi0868 6 месяцев назад
😂😂😂
@sergeshumbusho6432
@sergeshumbusho6432 5 месяцев назад
😅
@mosinregentt3392
@mosinregentt3392 3 месяца назад
Me who tried to make it at home
@Patrick_McFadin
@Patrick_McFadin Год назад
You know you're next level when you have a C8 as a finder scope. I think the real story here is how did he just happen to get a 70" mirror from a US spy satellite? So funny.
@stefanschneider3681
@stefanschneider3681 10 месяцев назад
That's what I was asking myself as well. How do you get it? At what price? How do you transport it? Do you have to have it polished every once in a while like the ones in Hawaii oder Chile? So many questions, so little time ...
@dmacpher
@dmacpher 10 месяцев назад
@@stefanschneider3681that’s how Hubble was built. Surplus mirror from a keyhole sat iirc. So there is some precedent for civilian use.
@praveenb9048
@praveenb9048 10 месяцев назад
Fell off a truck.
@stefanschneider3681
@stefanschneider3681 10 месяцев назад
@@praveenb9048 🤣
@glenchapman3899
@glenchapman3899 9 месяцев назад
@@dmacpher Yeah he bought it at a surplus auction
@patrickwiggins28
@patrickwiggins28 Год назад
Fun fact: Before Mike built the actual scope he first built a model our of popsicle sticks. (Really!)
@nohphd
@nohphd 10 месяцев назад
The mirror for the 200” Hale Telescope at Paloma’s Observatory was cast as a solid disk but had a 70” hole cut into it. That 70” piece of glass disappeared for decades but was located in a warehouse in Tasmania (of all places). It was purchased, brought back to California in the 1980s iirc, ground, shaped and figured and installed in an amateur scope on a hilltop above Fremont California. One never hears much about it.
@1DesertPirate
@1DesertPirate 9 месяцев назад
Could you possibly be writing about the reflector in Fremont Peak State Park? If so, it is a 30" reflector operated by the FPOA. There is a group in MacArthur, CA, Group 70, which is building a 70" reflector with an extra blank made for the 48-inch Schmidt camera on Palomar Mtn. The 48-inch Schmidt camera uses a 70-inch main mirror and they poured two blanks just in case one didn't work out. As an aside, the 120-inch Shane reflector at Lick Observatory uses the 120-inch test blank poured in preparation for the pouring of the 200-inch Hale telescope mirror. All interesting history.
@nohphd
@nohphd 9 месяцев назад
@@1DesertPirate not sure anymore. I ground a few primary mirrors at the ATM workshop at the Chabot Observatory in Oakland in the late 1990s along with a preteen nephew. One of the mentors was involved in the 70” project discussed it. It was fascinating.
@1DesertPirate
@1DesertPirate 9 месяцев назад
@@nohphd, probably was Kevin Medlock. He's heading up the Group 70 project.
@sten4982
@sten4982 7 месяцев назад
Jesus Christ, Friggin Tasmania. I wish we could cut that place off from the mainland. Kiwi's are better than them
@genoafire1
@genoafire1 Год назад
So the question that immediately comes to my mind is what is the setup time and how much do you need to disassemble the scope to transport it out of the storage building. I have a 24” Starmaster Dob that uses wheelbarrow handles to roll it out of the storage building and along a sidewalk to a circular concrete pad very similar to yours. 70” is absolutely incredible. Thanks so much for sharing Mike. The way you designed the scope to move the eyepiece down to ground level on a Dobsonian is absolute genius.
@pompeymonkey3271
@pompeymonkey3271 Год назад
It looked to me as if the whole thing could be moved (carefully!) on a pallet truck. Plus the path to what looks like it's shed is super smooth. But then I wonder how heavy the primary might be! lol Edit: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-aeIhoSh2NU8.html
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
Yes it can be wheeled in and out of the shed building quite easily. We have been tinkering the idea of disassembling certain parts and renting a trailer and taking it to a dark sky for a party and showcasing its glory under the extreme dark skies but it is very heavy and bulky and would definitely take a feat of engineering and labor to achieve a goal like that
@Blueknight1960
@Blueknight1960 Год назад
@@MaximumAstronomy Actually if he wanted to "spend" more money to move it, all he'd would need is a 5th wheel low bed trailer and he'd be able to take it to pretty much any dark sky site. Then once at the site, have a platform on each side of the trailer to walk on.
@user-ng2nt2tx4p
@user-ng2nt2tx4p 13 дней назад
Now THAT'S a serious case of Aperture Fever! You did good, Mike!
@mauriciolopez8870
@mauriciolopez8870 Год назад
I want to see images of this telescope.
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@mauriciolopez8870
@mauriciolopez8870 9 месяцев назад
@@MaximumAstronomy thanks for explaining why no images.
@johnb6723
@johnb6723 3 месяца назад
I want? Learn some manners! Manners maketh man!
@Ryan-lm8kd
@Ryan-lm8kd Месяц назад
@@MaximumAstronomy Couldn't you use Lucky Imaging tactics to get around the atmospheric wobble using this telescope?
@lukomatico
@lukomatico Год назад
Great job buddy! Wonderful videography and you did a great interview with Mike, what an authentic character and total badass he is haha! :-D Clear skies!
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
Thank you so much!
@tallperson9422
@tallperson9422 4 месяца назад
So cool! Kudos to Mike for the build.
@TheStevecas9860
@TheStevecas9860 Год назад
What an amazing achievement Mike has done! I would love to see any videos of the moon or planets that have been taken with this remarkable telescope?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@TheStevecas9860
@TheStevecas9860 9 месяцев назад
@@MaximumAstronomy Is there a way to contact Mike Directly? The reason is I make 2-inch fit 52mm focal length eyepieces and would like to donate one to him? Here is a review of one I sent to in the USA. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-82pJQQqTFQk.html
@yashsvidixit7169
@yashsvidixit7169 8 месяцев назад
@@MaximumAstronomy First of all, Thanks for taking us close to Mike's awesome telescope. If I understand correctly, field rotation would prohibit long exposure photography due to rotation of the target in the field despite being tracked. But I guess that it should be possible to take pictures of like 5 second exposure (and with not too much magnification to handle seeing), cuz there won't be much rotation in, say, 5 seconds. And targets like moon shouldn't need much exposure time at all.
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 8 месяцев назад
@@yashsvidixit7169 Correct. But the atmosphere turbulence needs to be at an absolute minimum to focus a camera at 11,000mm focal length. :)
@Sr.DeathKnight
@Sr.DeathKnight 5 месяцев назад
@@MaximumAstronomy Exactly.
@_stardust62
@_stardust62 10 месяцев назад
I'd be afraid looking at the moon through this scope might ruin my night vision for a couple weeks. 😊
@mauriciomorenorivera
@mauriciomorenorivera Год назад
Thanks for sharing this amazing and lovely beast!
@davehen4289
@davehen4289 Год назад
Amazing, thanks for sharing. I was wondering if a large shroud was going to go over the frame at some stage. But I guess for these monsters it would be difficult to do and also would knock it out of collimation. I did notice the black card to help block out the glare at the eyepiece.
@johnb6723
@johnb6723 3 месяца назад
A shroud is certainly an advantage for a Truss Newtonian.
@greatpix
@greatpix 10 месяцев назад
That would make a fantastic scope for video astronomy. You could set up multiple 4K tv's/monitors around the scope to handle any size crowd and still accommodate visual observers..
@user-yd1zl1tv8x
@user-yd1zl1tv8x 9 месяцев назад
Brilliant!!! Great job. Thanks for posting!
@reynoldfrancis6060
@reynoldfrancis6060 Год назад
It is not an off axis design. In off axis design,the secondary doesn’t block out light falling on the primary
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
Correct, it is not off-axis.
@andysPARK
@andysPARK Год назад
Any chance you could link to any website or gallery they might have?
@concernedcitizen780
@concernedcitizen780 Год назад
Don’t you envy this guy? So powerful you need to wear sunglasses when you look through it at the moon.
@gertebert
@gertebert Год назад
Where are the pictures taken with this telescope?
@petatirrumator3005
@petatirrumator3005 3 месяца назад
​@@gertebert read the description
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
@@gertebert There are none, it wasn't made for astrophotography, just visual astronomy.
@terrycooper4149
@terrycooper4149 9 месяцев назад
When pointed at the zenith, for fall protection, should you be equipped with a parachute?
@UrbanAstroLA
@UrbanAstroLA Год назад
Doesn't Clements also make some really crazy telescope focusers too? He should make a giant Schiefspeigler next (true off axis reflector) Keep up the videos Max!
@tuloko16
@tuloko16 Год назад
I’m pretty sure he has. I remember seeing a vid here on yt.
@bobaloo2012
@bobaloo2012 4 месяца назад
That's Don Clements, this is Mike Clements. Don is in California, Mike in Utah.
@Mandragara
@Mandragara Год назад
He has to resilver both mirrors yearly. Respect!
@MrFraneque
@MrFraneque 5 месяцев назад
Great history, brilliant people. Thanks for blowing up our minds today too. Inspiring. Keep on going
@arthurkaye8999
@arthurkaye8999 Год назад
Thats all good and exciting but arnt we going to see any images from this beast?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@robweber7325
@robweber7325 Год назад
Thank you for sharing that awesome video.
@greatpix
@greatpix 10 месяцев назад
The largest scope I ever got to look through was the 22" Kuhn scope that members of the Orange County Astronomers built (primarily Bill Kuhn) in the early to mid '80s.
@doctorshadow2482
@doctorshadow2482 10 месяцев назад
So, are there any videos which show what can be pictured with this telescope? And, I missed, have he build the corpse only or the mirror itself, as well?
@brucea9871
@brucea9871 8 месяцев назад
Does he realize there is a dinosaur wandering around his yard (first appeared at 8:18 and a better view was at 8:36)? Even dinosaurs are interested in this scope.
@guyh3403
@guyh3403 10 месяцев назад
Amazing telescope and an amazing person who built it!
@vanhouten64
@vanhouten64 10 дней назад
10:25 I love the red light at the top to keep aircraft from running into it. What's the angular field of view at low power?
@seanmolony-redstickastro238
Great video. Too bad we couldn't have a camera shot through it.
@gertebert
@gertebert Год назад
Yup. Where are all the pictures taken with this telescope? I'm looking for them for 5 years now.
@hellothere1947
@hellothere1947 10 месяцев назад
Fr like the telescope is cool and all but we want to see what the views look like
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@hyparh
@hyparh 6 месяцев назад
With very precise collimation it sure can do planetary imaging - it's not near as demanding as deep space imaging.
@Sr.DeathKnight
@Sr.DeathKnight 5 месяцев назад
Too much turbulence, the image wouldn't come up focused. @@hyparh
@hagengerdson1507
@hagengerdson1507 11 дней назад
Ich schaue in die Sterne seit Sommer 2023 und mein größtes Teleskop ist ein 200mm f5 Newton. Ich bin sooo begeistert von diesem Monstrum. So wuderbar das es so etwas in Privathand gibt. Leider beherrsche ich kein Englisch aber ich möchte so gerne viel Freude und Faszination am Universum wünschen. Unfassbar 70"....phooooooahyippijea ^^
@thefailedastronomer7407
@thefailedastronomer7407 10 месяцев назад
I can only imagine what globular clusters look like through that scope.
@davidaaaa4611
@davidaaaa4611 Месяц назад
WOW !!! I owned a 17.5 inch dob and viewed with 20 and 25 inch dobs, but you have those beat. Very nice telescope.
@utubevind
@utubevind Год назад
Wondering what would be the focal length of this thing ! I mean using C8 SCt as a finder scope, I cant comprehend this monster's capabilities
@EpicWaterLion
@EpicWaterLion Год назад
I did some calculations, should be around 7000mm f4
@Sr.DeathKnight
@Sr.DeathKnight 5 месяцев назад
11m, lol!
@kevanhubbard9673
@kevanhubbard9673 10 месяцев назад
I might, although other people must own them too, have the smallest amateur telescope. my 5x10 Zeiss Mini Quick monocular.I actually do use it for stargazing and was looking at M11 , the Wild Duck, and Epsilon Lyra, and Double Double,in it two nights ago.At some point I'll have to see if it can pluck out Neptune.
@CaptainBlueShell
@CaptainBlueShell 5 месяцев назад
I love how this guy is just so cool n down to earth (pun intended), especially at 8:48 when he sees the guy dressed as the dinosaur n looks over during n after his presentation! 😂 he takes pride in his work but not boastful n just super passionate about astronomy itself! Man is a true legend!
@blakebrothers
@blakebrothers Год назад
That is fantastic! If I visit I'll have to dig out my dinosaur costume - can't remember where I put it though.
@stinkyfungus
@stinkyfungus 5 месяцев назад
Finally someone mentions the marauding Allosaurus running around. 😅
@jgborn
@jgborn Год назад
So we don’t get to see any images of its capability? I was looking forward to that.
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@omgimlovinit
@omgimlovinit Год назад
He is like a student of Newton.
@andysPARK
@andysPARK Год назад
What an awesome scope! Nice people too..
@tsulasbigadventures
@tsulasbigadventures Год назад
That is really cool you got to look through Mike's big telescope. I have two questions though. How does he move it around? I didn't quite understand how a rocket blank worked as the primary mirror. Most Newtonians use spherical mirrors (I think). So, did he grind this rocket blank himself?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
No it was a mirrored finish when he bought it. It was a spy mirror that wasn’t configured just to the governments standards. So he built around it to form the telescope. To move the telescope it’s sat on several bearings which you can move the telescope relatively easily across the night sky, and it will track from there. You do have to keep the Altitude axis counterbalanced to help the tracking motors and engage the “clutch” so to speak for the azimuth to engage tracking or disengaged to move across to another target.
@tsulasbigadventures
@tsulasbigadventures Год назад
@@MaximumAstronomy Thanks for the explanation. I love learning about telescopes and that telescope is fascinating. Thanks for making this video about it. Take care.
@taraswertelecki3786
@taraswertelecki3786 Год назад
Wow, this behemoth telescope makes my 15-inch Dob look like a finder scope. I'm sure many objects that are very dim through a 15-inch are quite the opposite through a 70-inch.
@wotclips5581
@wotclips5581 10 месяцев назад
15 inch is still pretty insane. Im stuck with a 5" lol
@iitjeeaspirantija
@iitjeeaspirantija 8 месяцев назад
I'm stuck with my phone no telescope
@yashsvidixit7169
@yashsvidixit7169 8 месяцев назад
@@wotclips5581 I'm using 60 mm refractor.
@Sr.DeathKnight
@Sr.DeathKnight 5 месяцев назад
The problem is that it has a focal length of 11m, lol. Not many big objects can be seen. Also, he can't move It to darker places.
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
@@Sr.DeathKnight ...and climbing up and down tall ladders would get old fast.
@reflactor
@reflactor 6 месяцев назад
This was a fantastic video!
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 6 месяцев назад
Thank you so much!
@wictimovgovonca320
@wictimovgovonca320 Год назад
I can understand using Jupiter as a target for an open house event, but did he move to any deep-sky objects as well? I would love to get the chance to look through this telescope.
@Sr.DeathKnight
@Sr.DeathKnight 5 месяцев назад
The problem is that it has a focal length of 11m, lol. Not many big objects can be seen.
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
@@Sr.DeathKnight I imagine even the lowest power is quite high, and without a drive, one would be constantly having to move the scope to recenter everything.
@Sr.DeathKnight
@Sr.DeathKnight 29 дней назад
@@jc4evur661 Right.
@shalabazertheboltstruck8645
@shalabazertheboltstruck8645 2 месяца назад
Nice little travel scope Hahah amazing
@SPBurt1
@SPBurt1 11 дней назад
Wow! How, just how?!? I can barely find energy to set up my up my Meade 10inch LX200. Very cool.
@justinb9271
@justinb9271 11 месяцев назад
The arms on that bro! Clearly he did the work himself
@aarusty51
@aarusty51 Год назад
Great telescope, I hope he's working on the warp drive now.
@joshuah2948
@joshuah2948 Год назад
I see my guy Mike doesn’t skip arm day at the gym 💪🏼
@macgyver5108
@macgyver5108 Год назад
Big scope... "BigGunShow"!
@Dan_Soundgar
@Dan_Soundgar 2 месяца назад
There is a cryptid in this video, behind the dude, moving right to left
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
Many years ago at RTMC, there was a guy who had on display the framework (all out of 2x4's) for a 70" scope...with no mirror. His wife gave him the OK to build the framework but not the OK to purchase the mirror. Obviously the framework was too flimsy to support a 70" mirror, but this guy believed otherwise. You have all types attending the Riverside Telescope Makers Conference!
@ACE771983
@ACE771983 Год назад
Is it possible that they can show images through the telescope?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
Unfortunately that telescope wasn’t setup for photographic use. The telescope because of its extremely long focal length and being Alt Az, long exposure is just about impossible with an instrument with this much magnification.
@c.guibbs1238
@c.guibbs1238 Год назад
@@MaximumAstronomy If you use it for visual only, how do you manage atmospheric seeing at high magnification ? When I think, I can barely stand seeing through my tiny 4" refractor...
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
@@c.guibbs1238 Honestly most of the observing through this telescope is down at 40mm or similar eyepieces that will still deliver somewhere in the 275x magnification range. But we don’t hardly ever get to go above that since the atmosphere doesn’t allow it. But at 275x power it’s already hard to get decent views some nights because of seeing.
@c.guibbs1238
@c.guibbs1238 Год назад
@@MaximumAstronomy I'm not surprised : with your scope, a magnification of 275x corresponds to an exit pupil of 6mm, which leads to high levels of eye aberrations (mainly spherical). So, at the end, you have to deal with a non cooperative atmosphere and a non cooperative eye, as well !
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
@@c.guibbs1238 This is why they put large scopes at extremely distant locales.
@yobb89
@yobb89 6 месяцев назад
you said blank, so he polished the mirror and got it coated ? any vids on that ?
@mikecoz3d
@mikecoz3d Год назад
Photographs would be nice.
@roo8814
@roo8814 Год назад
Awesome!!!
@MrDennisLB
@MrDennisLB Год назад
Just curious... How much does your 70 inch main mirror weigh? Thank You!
@theterribleanimator1793
@theterribleanimator1793 10 дней назад
more than a normal person can lift i assure you.
@jupite1888
@jupite1888 6 месяцев назад
Simple parts from Lowes and Home Depot? But a Super Brain to make it. Magic Mike
@DavidRabanus
@DavidRabanus Год назад
Where do you get a 70-inch mirror?
@MobileGamingMK
@MobileGamingMK 21 день назад
custom made by someone at glass factory
@StereoSpace
@StereoSpace Год назад
Wow. Awesome.
@71janas
@71janas 10 месяцев назад
Put a camera on it, let's see what it can do!!
@TheLDunn1
@TheLDunn1 Год назад
70” of aperture….& you go and look at the planets??? 😂😂😂 …..I wanted to hear what it was like on relatively dim DSO’s! 😃
@wictimovgovonca320
@wictimovgovonca320 Год назад
My thoughts exactly. They probably choose Jupiter because this was an open-house event. While I have observed through a 74" telescope, its location was far from ideal, unlike when it was built in 1935.
@robertw1871
@robertw1871 11 месяцев назад
I’d actually be a little terrified of looking at Jupiter through that, has to be like looking at the sun, I’d love to see M1 through that monster.
@johnb6723
@johnb6723 3 месяца назад
The largest optical telescope in the solar system is Hubble at a good 90ft aperture and can split double stars closer than 0.01 arc seconds. For a larger telescope than that, one would have to go to another solar system, perhaps Proxima Centauri B, where, who knows, there might be an optical telescope of a mile or more in diameter, which might be able to see Earth clearly.
@bogey19018
@bogey19018 Год назад
Any videos of the moon with this scope?
@gertebert
@gertebert Год назад
Still looking for pictures taken with this telescope. Looking for 5 years now.
@JamesAAshton
@JamesAAshton Год назад
With its 11-metre focal length the image of the moon would be 95mm (close to 4 inches) across. That's way beyond the sensor size of even professional movie cameras. Even a full-frame camera (43mm diagonal) would show only a small fraction of the moon in any one shot. You wouldn't see any more detail than in other telescopes either, because the shimmering caused by the atmosphere is what limits resolution beyond quite small instruments.
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
@@gertebert There are none, it wasn't made for astrophotography, just visual astronomy.
@TheRandomTurtleOfficial
@TheRandomTurtleOfficial 9 дней назад
Who else noticed the guy in the dinosaur costume?
@robertw1871
@robertw1871 11 месяцев назад
The relatively big C8 just disappears lol, that’s crazy…
@gertebert
@gertebert Год назад
I can't find any pictures taken with this telescope. Or am I looking not good enough? I'm so curious!
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
There are none, it wasn't made for astrophotography, just visual astronomy.
@martinlagrange8821
@martinlagrange8821 Год назад
Technically speaking, the monster is a Single-Fold Herschelian -named for the design first used by John Herschel , essentially an (slightly) off-axis Newtonian to maximise light gathering from poor reflectivity in the 18th century. There has also been an article posted in March 2004 Sky & Telescope for making an 6" unobstructed instrument.
@ksm3220
@ksm3220 Год назад
Mike's is not Herschelian but Newtonian, the 28" 2ndary obstruct the 70" aperture
@JamesAAshton
@JamesAAshton Год назад
A Herschelian is off axis; the axis of the parabolic mirror doesn't align with the axis of the telescope tube (or truss in this case). This monster does have the mirror aligned with the truss so the centre of the image goes straight back to the secondary in the middle. It's only different from the usual Newtonian in that the angle of the flat secondary is not 45°.
@mastercreator2854
@mastercreator2854 Год назад
Wished this caught the “spy satellite” moving from Montana to Kansas
@ledex74
@ledex74 11 месяцев назад
Y no muestran ninguna imagen?
@gowdsake7103
@gowdsake7103 6 месяцев назад
Terrific I wish I ever had clear skys
@barryporteous4904
@barryporteous4904 11 дней назад
I assume it lives in the nearby building - moved out with a forklift for use?
@donepearce
@donepearce 9 месяцев назад
Smart move making it Dobsonian
@hadleymanmusic
@hadleymanmusic 10 месяцев назад
Who made the mirror?
@Less1leg2
@Less1leg2 10 месяцев назад
try keeping this clean and alined
@astropunekar
@astropunekar 2 месяца назад
is that a good scope for traveling with?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 2 месяца назад
Oh yes super portable 😂
@stefanschneider3681
@stefanschneider3681 10 месяцев назад
That was fun - too bad you couldn't show any pictures. No way you could have pointed just a smartphone into the optic? Thanks for sharing, I had no idea this existed. But I live in Switzerland in the middle of Europe, maybe that's why 😉
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@callmebigpapa
@callmebigpapa 10 месяцев назад
It must be amazing to be able to see the night sky!
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
From a truly dark and steady location...not from a residential area where there's plenty of street lights.
@malcolmt7883
@malcolmt7883 Год назад
That is serious focal length. What's the lowest magnification, 1000x?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
Yes it is! The focal length is around 11,000mm, give or take a little. So even a lower power eyepiece around 40mm give around a 275X magnification. You can of course so higher power if you’d like as well!
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
@@MaximumAstronomy Yet would have to always be manually moving the scope to track the object.
@Graeme_Lastname
@Graeme_Lastname 4 месяца назад
The mirrors looked a bit mucky.
@SuzanneWhitehead-ot9fi
@SuzanneWhitehead-ot9fi Год назад
That is the hugest Dobsonian I have ever seen in my entire life! How do you move it from one place to another?
@MountainFisher
@MountainFisher Год назад
Pallet jack.
@wictimovgovonca320
@wictimovgovonca320 Год назад
Really big station wagon... ... I suspect it stays where it is, only moving from the garage to the flat concrete slab we see it on.
@herri18
@herri18 Год назад
Awsome.. Do you have any idea how much that 70" blank cost?
@robertw1871
@robertw1871 11 месяцев назад
A lot, probably several hundred thousand if not a few million…
@thomasbuhrkall969
@thomasbuhrkall969 Год назад
what is the focal length?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
About 11,000mm give or take a little!
@bread-ih9lm
@bread-ih9lm 29 дней назад
I'm not saying this isn't homemade or impressive, but reusing a 70" spy mirror sure sounds easier than grinding out and coating a 70" reflector.
@TGUlricksen
@TGUlricksen 2 месяца назад
How does a 42% obstruction impact the image quality? Is the penalty worth the convenience?
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
I would imagine the bright lights from the surrounding neighborhood would cause bigger problems.
@hadleymanmusic
@hadleymanmusic 10 месяцев назад
Hes super brain. Gotta be a fire sign
@guilhermetorresj
@guilhermetorresj Год назад
His finderscope is a C8. I'm kinda jealous.
@TheCoolProfessor
@TheCoolProfessor 4 месяца назад
Admit it! You're building a Death Star!
@pawargokul
@pawargokul 9 месяцев назад
Where are images ? Taken by this scope ? Where is demo to show how this beast works ?
@jc4evur661
@jc4evur661 29 дней назад
There are none, it wasn't made for astrophotography, just visual astronomy.
@EmoryBlake4Music
@EmoryBlake4Music 7 месяцев назад
When the size of your secondary outdoes the size of my primary by 19 inches. Unbelievable. (edited for spelling error)
@erocoptics5642
@erocoptics5642 Год назад
I've been selling and working on and repairing telescopes for 40 years. Much respect wow the biggest I ever saw amateurs was 36-in. I was worrying about flexor with the mirror he bought. that sucker it must be thick super super thick and super heavy
@bobaloo2012
@bobaloo2012 4 месяца назад
It was made to be put in a satellite, it's very light (for its size)
@OMaMaRMY
@OMaMaRMY 7 месяцев назад
damn you need some custom 3 inch or 4 inch eyepieces with that monster 😂😂 like a 100mm 4 inch ethos deluxe pro max 120 degrees 256GB 16GB Ram (fantasy eyepiece 😂)
@dysichi
@dysichi 8 месяцев назад
Wow, the C8 looks just like a baby by side of a giant.
@spacenbetween4585
@spacenbetween4585 Год назад
Any images?
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy Год назад
Hopefully soon. I left the general public take priority on enjoying it first :)
@MikeLikesChannel
@MikeLikesChannel Год назад
@@MaximumAstronomy to them a moon is a moon. Get a private session 😆
@ThompPL1
@ThompPL1 11 месяцев назад
Even a decent cell phone camera put up to the eyepiece would be better than just "imagination" right ? 😉🔭🪐🌃
@ksm3220
@ksm3220 Год назад
Best ATM amateur for best hobby in the universe!
@ogshotglass9291
@ogshotglass9291 10 дней назад
Man, you should have taken a few photos with a smartphone to show us lol.
@klttrll
@klttrll Год назад
I wonder what the horsehead nebula is like
@viniguez487
@viniguez487 Год назад
HE LOOKS EXACTLY WHAT I THOUGHT A MAN WHO OWNS A 70 INCH SCOPE LOOKED LIKE = BRENT SPINER IN ID4
@CIBERXGAMING
@CIBERXGAMING 9 месяцев назад
you didnt put your phone up to the eyepiece!
@MaximumAstronomy
@MaximumAstronomy 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just that simple. Astrophotography using an Altazimuth design like this one introduces field rotation. This is combated using an EQ mount. But with a focal length of over 11,000mm and unstable seeing conditions, you are rarely ever able to take advantage of this aperture and power. Using a camera is going to deliver rotation and very fuzzy photos due to atmospheric turbulence. Mike has configured this as visual instrument only.
@lornaz1975
@lornaz1975 Год назад
How does he re-coat the mirrors? At least the secondary needs it bad!
@harshvardhan4771
@harshvardhan4771 Год назад
I was wondering the same. The secondary mirror seemed way too worn out to act as a secondary mirror for a telescope.
@jurestormchaser5382
@jurestormchaser5382 Год назад
@@harshvardhan4771 the primary looks like a front kit lens on a camera whose owner regularly leaves fingerprints on and cleans them with their T-shirt. I have serious doubts about the performance of this telescope (I may be completely wrong though).
@tubedude54
@tubedude54 Год назад
All large observatories have an optical shop for recoating mirrors. He would just arraign and take it to one.
@stefanshorizont9495
@stefanshorizont9495 17 дней назад
Teleskope dieser Größe sind zum Fotografieren unbrauchbar. Mit kleineren Teleskopen können Sie bessere Ergebnisse erzielen. Aber es ist wahrscheinlich unglaublich für das Auge und schwer zu beschreiben, das Auge ist anpassungsfähiger als eine Kamera. Toller Kerl, reflektiert auch sein Teleskop.
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