Orion SHORTTUBE 80-A Instruction Manual page 4

80mm rich-field refracting telescope
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The dovetail mounting plate now connected to the
ShortTube 80-A connects to the equatorial mount's dovetail
holder. The dovetail holder has two securing knobs to keep
the dovetail plate securely in place. Be sure to loosen these
two knobs prior to attaching the telescope. While grasping
the telescope firmly, place the dovetail mounting plate into
the mount's dovetail holder and tighten the clamping knobs
to secure the optical tube.
An equatorial mount is desirable for astronomical viewing
as it allows easy manual and/or motorized electronic track-
ing of celestial objects as the Earth rotates. Setting circles
on equatorial mounts also enable you to locate objects by
their celestial coordinates (right ascension and declina-
tion), which can be found in many observing books and star
atlases.
Note: If you are using an Orion EQ-1 or EQ-2 equatorial
mount, the dovetail mounting plate is not needed for attach-
ing the telescope. Simply mount the telescope to your EQ-1
or EQ-2 mount by attaching the tube rings directly to the
mount head and then placing the telescope into the tube
rings. Be sure to tighten the silver tube ring clamping knobs
to secure the telescope.
The ShortTube 80-A can also be easily mounted on altaz-
imuth mounts like the Orion VersaGo which utilizes a dove-
tail holder like Orion equatorial mounts. Follow the previous
directions to couple the telescope to the mounting plate
with the tube rings, and to attach the mounting plate to the
VersaGo mount's dovetail holder.
Alternatively, the ShortTube 80-A can be mounted on any
standard camera tripod that has a 1⁄4"-20 stud. As described
previously, attach the included tube rings to the dovetail
mounting plate using the included hardware and then place
the optical tube into the rings. Be sure to tighten the silver
clamping knob on each tube ring to secure the telescope.
The camera tripod's 1⁄4"-20 stud will thread directly into the
threaded holes on the bottom of the dovetail mounting plate.
Focusing
The ShortTube 80-A is equipped with a precision rack-
and-pinion focuser. When you first look in the eyepiece, the
image you see may be fuzzy, or out of focus. If so, gently
turn one of the focusing wheels with your fingers until the
image becomes sharp. You will have to readjust the focus
when aiming at subjects of varying distances, or after
changing eyepieces. Make sure the focus lock thumbscrew
is loosened before focusing. After focusing, you can tighten
it to lock the telescope's focus into place.
Note: The image in the telescope will appear reversed left-
to-right. This is normal for astronomical telescopes that uti-
lize a star diagonal. The finder scope view will also appear
rotated 180° (Figure 2d).
4
Naked-eye view
View through the ShortTube 80-A
View through the ShortTube 80-A
View through finder scope
Figure 2d.
Figure 2d.
Images through the ShortTube 80-A with its star
diagonal in place will be reversed from left-to-right. Images through
the finder scope will appear upside-down and backwards (rotated
180°).
Do You Wear Eyeglasses?
If you wear eyeglasses, you may be able to keep them on
while you observe, if your eyepieces have enough "eye
relief" to allow you to see the whole field of view. You can
find out by looking through the eyepiece first with your
glasses on and then with them off, and see if the glasses
restrict the view to only a portion of the full field. If they do,
you can easily observe with your glasses off by just refocus-
ing the telescope the needed amount.
Aligning the Finder Scope
The ShortTube 80-A comes with a 8x40 achromatic finder
scope. (The 8x means eight-times magnification, and the
40 indicates a 40mm aperture.) The finder scope makes it
easier to locate the subject you want to observe in the tele-
scope, because the finder scope has a much wider field of
view.
Before you use the finder scope, it must be precisely aligned
with the telescope, so they both point to exactly the same
spot. Alignment is easiest to do in daylight, rather than at
night under the stars. First, insert the lowest-power (20mm)
eyepiece into the main telescope's focuser. Then point the
telescope at a discrete object such as the top of a telephone
pole or a street sign that is at least a quarter-mile away.
Move the telescope so the target object appears in the very
center of the field of view when you look into the eyepiece.
Now look through the finder scope. Is the object centered
in the finder scope's field of view, i.e., on the crosshairs?
If not, hopefully it will be visible somewhere in the field of
view, so only fine adjustment of the two black nylon align-
ment screws will be needed. Otherwise you'll have to make
coarser adjustments to the alignment screws to redirect the
aim of the finder scope.

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