ASTRO-PHYSICS 400 매뉴얼 - 페이지 5

{카테고리_이름} ASTRO-PHYSICS 400에 대한 매뉴얼을 온라인으로 검색하거나 PDF를 다운로드하세요. ASTRO-PHYSICS 400 8 페이지. German equatorial mount with dual axis quartz drive (silver-dome knobs)

ASSEMBLE CRADLE PLATE
Attach the cradle plate to the top of the declination axis with the four ¼-20 screws provided with the mount. When you
have finished your observing session, the cradle plate may remain attached to the declination axis or removed as
desired.
ASSEMBLE COUNTERWEIGHT SHAFT
IMPORTANT: Always attach the counterweights before mounting the telescope to prevent sudden movement of
an unbalanced tube assembly, which may cause damage or injury. Remember, counterweights are heavy and
will hurt if they fall on your foot.
1. Thread counterweight shaft onto the Dec. axis.
2. Remove the hand knob and washer from the base of the counterweight shaft. Add sufficient counterweights (6 or
9 lb counterweights are available) to the counterweight shaft to balance the telescope you intend to use. Always
use two hands to attach or move them on the shaft. Reattach the hand knob and washer to the end of
counterweight shaft. This will help to prevent injury if someone accidentally loosens the counterweight hand
knob.
A firm tightening of the counterweight knob will not damage the surface of the counterweight shaft. The pin that
tightens against the stainless counterweight shaft is constructed of brass. Likewise, the bronze sleeve that has been
press fit into the center of the counterweight will prevent marring of the shaft as you move the counterweights.
When you remove the counterweight shaft, a threaded black anodized piece may remain attached to your
counterweight shaft. This is of no concern as it can be threaded back onto the mount.

OPERATION OF THE MOUNTING

You can move your telescope to various objects either by grasping the telescope tube and moving it manually or by
pressing the buttons on the controller.
Clutch Lever: There are two black painted clamps: one located on the R.A. axis and the other on
the Dec. axis. If the levers are loosened, the axes can be swung around freely. If the telescope is properly
counterbalanced, the clutches can be left partially engaged. This will allow you to move the telescope easily without
constant clamping and unclamping the axes. For astrophotography, snug up a bit more. Please do not overtighten
these clamping levers. If the levers are very tight and you try to move the telescope manually by grasping the tube
(as you probably do habitually), you will place severe strain on the driving gear teeth. This word of caution is true of
any mount.
Balancing Your Telescope: For proper operation, the telescope must be adequately counterbalanced. Start by
balancing the tube assembly. Tighten the black R.A. axis clutch clamp; loosen the black Dec. axis clutch clamp so
that the telescope tube rotates on the declination axis. If you are using the dovetail plate, loosen the two side knobs
and move the sliding bar, with scope attached, forwards and backwards. If you are not using the dovetail plate,
loosen the mounting rings and slide the tube up or down. The scope is balanced when it stays level with no clutch
drag. Now, tighten the declination axis with the clutch clamp and loosen the R.A. clutch clamp. Move the
counterweights up or down to achieve balance in R.A. Remember to allow for the extra weight of diagonals,
eyepieces, and finderscopes. If the scope moves by itself, even when the clutches are loose, the scope is not fully
counterbalanced precisely. A small amount of imbalance on the east side of the mount is permissible and even
desirable for astrophotography and imaging. When the mount is properly aligned, it is possible to take unguided
astrophotos for several minutes without trailed star images.