troypiggo wrote in post #6675029
Hi ebann,
I'm kind of torn at this juncture. I'm aware that the EQ6 is overkill for an ED80, but I was planning for the future a little. I am the sort of person who'd rather spend a little more for the better quality stuff up front, but at the moment I'd have trouble justifying buying this gear now and would have to wait until mid to late next year to sell the idea to my wife.
At 36 kgs just the mount, you'd hate to lug that thing around... but if you can afford it, better get it now than later. But if you decide later on that astronomy is not your kind of thing, you just over spent.
So just this morning I had a "bright" idea. I could get the cheaper ED80 mentioned in my original post[1], and a lighter/cheaper mount like the CG5 or EQ5 or thereabouts. I could probably do that for half the cost I guess. The downside would probably be that I couldn't put a bigger scope on that mount.
Depends on what bigger scope you are planning to get later on. My EQ3-2 (which is identical to Celestron's CG-4, and Orion's AstroView; older versions with aluminum legs) originally came with a 6" Newtonian reflector. That's way bigger than my tiny 70mm refractor. Obviously, refractors weighs significantly more. Bigger refractors will cost you an arm and a leg, so it's better to get them small and then LATER use them as guiding scopes on top of a reflectors or Cassegrains.
If you plan to do that, you'd better start off with the EQ6.
But, if and when I decide to upgrade to a bigger/better scope, I could get the bigger mount then, and keep the smaller scope and mount. Then we'd have 2 mounts and 2 scopes - while I'm using one of them, my wife could use the other. She's into this also.
Good idea? I like it because it gets me up and running sooner, and when we know a little more we'll have a better idea of what we want.
It really depends what you want to do. I'm assuming you want to do astrophotography with your DSLR at prime focus (i.e. use the scope as a lens). What is your wife going to do? If she just wants to view the sky, a really solid mount is not required. I love using my 70mm refractor on top of a normal tripod with an Alt-Azi mount (TeleVue Up-Swing which is similar to a Wimberly head). I scan the sky very quickly. When I'm really lazy, I just grab my nice 50x10 binoculars and head out of the door.
[1] While I appreciate Nighthound/Steve's suggestion of that quality ED80, and I'm not ignoring his excellent advice deliberately, I am thinking that the price of the one on offer is too good to pass up. I reckon I could sell it if/when I decide to upgrade to a better quality one and not lose too much money, or just keep it and piggyback it or something.
The good brands are:
Takahashi
William Optics
TeleVue
Meade
Celestron
I'm not aware of your particular model. Go to www.cloudynights.com
forum and see if someone knows about it.