From: Milton Aupperle <milton@outcastsoft.com>

Date: May 28, 2008 3:13:53 PM MDT

To: Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com

Subject: Re: [Astro_IIDC] Re: Field of View versus Orientation of Celestron Off Axis Guider


Hi Perry;


On 28-May-08, at 2:49 PM, hpholcomb wrote:


Hey Milton,


Thanks for that diagram.


So, what you're illustrating here is that the OAG prism is looking at

a field that is 180 deg. from the guide camera position using the

scope's optical tube as the circle.


Yes. When I got it the OAG I was assuming it operated like a submarines periscope and could see "down to the water line" so to speak at 90°. It doesn't come close to that at all.


Shouldn't this hold true for all such OAGs that use essentially the

same setup as the Celestron?


That would be my guess too, but since I haven't used any brands like the Giant Easy Guider or others, I can't say for certain.


For me the simplest test method was to use the OAG with 2 cameras (one camera and an eye piece would work too) and the moon as my target. It's bright, big and pretty easy to figure out what area your looking at.


HTH..


Milton J. Aupperle



Perry



--- In Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com, "Milton Aupperle" <milton@...> wrote:


Hi Folks;


Any of you that have used or are using a Celestron Off Axis Guider

(OAG) may be interested in looking at this diagram I created:



http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Astro_IIDC/files/Other/OAG_Visual_Representation.png



Basically it demonstrates what a Celestron Off Axis Guider would see

as you rotate the guide camera around the main camera, from Position 1

to Position 4. The two red circles describe the "donut" Field Of View

that the OAG can see as it's rotated around the scopes axis. The inner

most Red Donut ring is with the prism orientation knob twisted  all

the way out and the outer red ring is with the prism knob all the way

in. The Moon in the center gives you an idea of scale, as it's about

31 arc minutes in size in the image.


When I used my Celestron OAG, I was always under the impression that

the prism of the OAG was "looking" at an angle of 90 degrees or less,

so that if the Guide cameras was oriented vertically above the main

camera, then that's where it looking for objects, above the guide

cameras FOV within the two red circles.


In actual use, the guide camera views what is below the main camera on

the opposite side that it is oriented on. This solves my mystery where

I always had problems finding a specific guide star that "should" be

there but I would never find it, or I would find some other star.


Hope it helps someone..


Milton Aupperle