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To most people, the first question to ask about a
telescope is "What magnification will it give?" but the important
properties of an astronomical telescope are ‘the light gathering potential’ and
‘the accuracy of the optics’.
This means
the bigger and more accurately configured the optics are,
the more powerful the telescope.
There are however penalties in bigger and more accurately
polished optics, the main one being costs. As a rule of thumb, doubling
the diameter of the primary optics will increase the cost
by a factor of ten. Therefore a 150mm (6inch) telescope
might cost £300 a 300mm diameter mirror may cost £3000 and
a 600mm diameter instrument £30000.
There
are also two types of mounting used for holding the telescope
tube these are known as Altazimuth and Equatorial.
The Altazimuth is the type of mounting used on seaside
telescopes, camera mounts and other tripod type mountings.
It has a rotating base like a turntable and a fork
mounting to allow the telescope to be pointed up and down.
The simple mounting used on most amateurs telescopes
is an Altazimuth type designed by an American named John Dobson,
hence the name Dobsonian. This mounting has a turntable which rotates on bearings. The base has feet for stability
on rough surfaces and the rotating box on the turntable support
has bearings to support the telescope in its two side panels.
There
are cheap 100mm (4 inch) telescopes sold by main street stores
and catalogues for about £200. These
are quite good but if astronomy is to be pursued as a hobby
it is better to spend a bit more to get a 150mm (6 inch) for
about £370. It is
possible to buy a second hand telescope through the adverts
in astronomy magazines. A
150mm may cost less than £200 possibly even as low as £150.
It is worth getting a larger second hand telescope
rather than a smaller new one which will not have enough light
grasp to enable the new astronomer to see some of the more
interesting objects.
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