Meade Catalog
Meade Catalog
Meade Catalog
2009
Find Your Telescope.
F i n d Y o u r s e l f.
®
WWW.MEADE.COM
TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S
TELESCOPE SECTIONS
E TX ® Series 2
L ightBridge ™ (Truss-Tube Dobsonians) 20
L XD75 ™ Series 30
L X90-ACF ™ Series 50
L X200-ACF ™ Series 62
L X400-ACF ™ Series 78
Max Mount ™ 88
S eries 5000 ™ ED APO Refractors 100
A and DS-2000 Series 108
EXHIBITS
1 - AutoStar® 13
2 - AutoAlign ™ with SmartFinder ™ 15
3 - Optical Systems 45 Find Your Telescope.
4 - Aperture 57
5 - UHTC ™ 68 F i n d Y o u r s e l f.
6 - Slew Speed 69
7 - AutoStar® II 86
8 - Oversized Primary Mirrors 87
9 - Advanced Pointing and Tracking 92
10 - Electronic Focus and Collimation 93
ACCESSORIES
I magers (LPI,™ DSI, DSI II) 116
S eries 5000 ™ Eyepieces 130
S eries 4000 ™ Eyepieces 132
S eries 4000 ™ Filters 134
A ccessory Kits 136
I maging Accessories 138
M iscellaneous Accessories 140
Meade Optical Advantage 128
Meade 4M Community 124
Astrophotography Index/Information 145
.05 LX 200 -ACF .06 LX 400-ACF .07 SEries 5000 ED APO .08 A/DS -2000 SERIES
™ ™ ™
™
.01
recruit
ETX
®
S E R IE S
Mindset:
I want a “real” telescope that will give me an awe-inspiring first
few nights and grow with me for years to come. (Or a second scope
that takes my hobby to a new level).
Mantra:
No toys (I bought a cheap telescope once and boy was I sorry).
Priorities:
Fun, easy, cool, exciting. Compact enough to take camping,
RVing, traveling.
Goals:
See Saturn’s rings, Jupiter’s moons, galaxies, nebulas,
c lusters and lunar details.
Performance: Ideal all-around scope.
View both Earth and sky objects. Observe visually or take
your first astrophotographs.
Optical Design:
Maksutov-Cassegrain or ETX-80 Refractor. (See pg. 16)
Strengths:
Easy-to-use AutoStar ® controller finds and tracks things for you.
Solid mount and razor sharp optics—all in a portable package.
Buzz:
Sky & Telescope magazine said of the ETX, “Now anyone can play the
backyard-astronomy game cheaply and without fear of frustration.”
.01
ASTRONOMY IS FOR EVERYonE. So is the ETX.
E T X ® S eries ETX-PE
ETX-80
B.
A. K.
J. c. g.
D.
E.
H.
I.
F.
“In one brilliant stroke, “In a matter of minutes, I “Suddenly there is no excuse
Meade’s brainy ETX system has could see two or three dozen for anyone with even the
erased the learning curve.” objects in rapid succession, slightest interest in astronomy
finding them effortlessly...” not to become a participant.”
— Sky & Telescope magazine — Astronomy magazine — Sky & Telescope magazine
When Meade first introduced the ETX ® (short for Everyone’s Telescope), astronomers “in the know”
created such overwhelming demand that the scopes were almost impossible to get. Several years
later, those new to astronomy are just beginning to discover the ETX while serious astronomers
still flock to it as the ideal ultra-portable scope in their collection.
With optics that rival the most expensive telescopes, computerized star-finding capabilities, and a
rock-solid mount, the ETX is a no-brainer for the best possible entry-level astronomy experience.
Comes ready-to-stargaze with all you see here:
O v e r s i z e d P r i m a ry M i r ror . Only Meade manufactures primary mirrors larger than the scope’s
listed aperture to capture more light (see pg. 87). c.
Fl i p-M i r ror Sy s t e m . Permits viewing either straight through or at a 90° position. Allows camera attachment
with optional T-adapter (pg. 138). 90˚ diagonal mirror and 26mm Series 4000 ™ Super Plössl eyepiece included.
d.
Motor i z e d D ua l -A x i s D r i v e Sy s t e m . Precisely engineered high-torque motors permit electronic
operation in either altazimuth or equatorial mode. Nine different speeds for slow-motion control.
e.
D e lu x e Fi e l d Tr i p od. Rock-solid yet lightweight, this adjustable, rigid tripod is the ideal platform for any
application of your ETX from daytime observing to beginning astrophotography. It is fully adjustable to match any height
adult or child. Works in either altazimuth or equatorial mode.
f.
D e lu x e Au to Sta r ® c on t rol l e r . The heart of the ETX computer-guided telescope finds things in the night
sky for you (see pg. 13). g.
26m m Ser i es 4 000 ™ Ey epi ece. Wide field of view makes stargazing easy. Quality optics yield sharp,
high-contrast images. i.
UHTC.™ Our exotic multi-layer optical coatings optimize light transmission. Image brightness is increased by 15% over standard
coatings. It’s like adding up to an extra inch of aperture (depending on scope size). Objects appear dramatically brighter (see pg. 68). J.
Au toA l ign ™ w i t h Sm a rtFi n de r ™ . Easy red dot finder with automatic alignment (see pg. 15). K.
ETX-PE
ETX-90PE #3514-03-55 ETX-125PE #0515-03-55
For a full list of specifications go to www.meade.com. Specifications are subject to change without notice.
ETX-80AT #0805-04-21
ETX-80
80mm (3.15") aperture
Achromatic Refractor
f/5 focal ratio (400mm)
#494 AutoStar (1400 object database)
9.7 mm, 26mm Series 4000 Super Plössls
Multi-Coated Optics
6.7 lbs net weight, less tripod
5.9" x 7" x 9"
6 aa batteries (user supplied)
Slew Speed: 2x sidereal to
4.5˚/sec in 9 increments
ETX
.01
Choosing an ETX is easy.
®
R e ac t i on from the parents was similar. But they agreed to drag the boys out to a star party as long
as there was a scouting award attached. Anything for a belt loop. We held our event at a pack member’s home just outside
of Gretna, Nebraska. They had dark skies and four acres of space. That allowed us to have a bon fire (well away from the
telescopes of course) and refreshments. No one expected they would want to spend the entire night at the eyepiece.
All of that changed when I got out my Meade ETX telescope and focused on the moon. Once the kids saw the mountains,
ridges and craters of the moon that are clearly visible through a quality telescope, their cries of excitement began to draw
curious parents across the field for a look.
With a crowd gathering, we went to the next brightest object in the sky (I had no idea what it was) and asked the ETX’s
AutoStar controller to identify it. We soon discovered we were looking at Jupiter.
Now, I’m one of those guys who bring real meaning to the term “amateur” astronomer. But by this time I
had about 30 boys and their parents eating out of the palm of my hand. I was fielding all kinds of questions like:
How far? How big? How bright? How come? By the time we got to Saturn, so many parents were in line for a
look that I had to politely remind them to give the boys a chance.
Late that night when the party finally died down, every boy in the pack had earned his astronomy belt loop.
But a few of them had earned something much more: A lifetime love of the night sky.
10
11
.01
®
ETX series
Just because a galaxy
m ay be billions of years old,
d oesn’t mean it should take
that long to f ind it.
M10 9
S e l e c t ga l a x y . Wa t c h y o u r t e l e s c o p e f i n d S e e ga l a x y .
a n d t r a c k t h e ga l a x y f o r y o u .
D e l u x e A utoStar #497
O v e r 3 0 , 0 00 objects
9 Moon and planets. All the major ones from Mercury to dwarf planet Pluto.
13
Automatic Alignment The ETX Premier Edition Advantage
™ ®
ETX
.01
EXHIBIT 2 AutoAlign with
AutoAlign with
™
SmartFinder
SmartFinder ™
“Inspired by top-secret
wwii bombsight technology,
the red-dot viewfinder makes
hitting targets easy.”
– Ken Baun, Former Sr. Vice President,
Meade Engineering
TURN IT ON AND IT
KNOWS THE NIGHT SKY.
Alignment doesn’t get any easier.
Just enter your point of departure to embark on a tour of the universe. Meade introduces what
everyone’s been waiting for: automatic alignment. There’s no time and date to enter. No plodding from
star to star to star. Just enter your city or ZIP Code and AutoAlign automatically aligns your
telescope and finds two fine-tuning stars for you. Center them and you’re ready to tour the universe.
SmartFinder
The easiest way to center a star.
Meade SmartFinder helps novices with one of the early frustrating parts
of astronomy: Centering objects in the finder scope. To the veteran,
this is easy. But to a novice it can feel like looking for stars through a
drinking straw. By contrast, Meade’s unique red dot finder lets you look
at a wide field of the sky with both eyes open. You simply center the red
dot on the object you want to see. Then look through your telescope’s
eyepiece and it will be there.
15
“The coolest thing we saw in Mexico was Saturn.”
Camping out is a great way to see the world.
Just remember that some of nature’s grandest
s ights are directly over your head.
16
THE ETX-80 ULTRA-PORTABLE telescope
™
Ever get so far away from the city that the stars look like you
could reach out and touch them? Wish you could get just a little
closer? Now you can. The ultra-portable ETX-80 is the perfect
campground observatory. It’s ideal for camping, hiking, picnics,
the beach, vacations, or any other time you want to connect with
nature and the universe.
series
®
ETX
.01
.01
mark sibole / m51 - whirlpool galaxy / ETX-125 / dsi pro ii mark sibole / ngc 4565 - needle galaxy / etx-125 / dsi pro ii
series ETX
®
Meade may recommend the ETX-PE
as a great way to start out right in
astronomy. But some astronomers
use its razor-sharp optics for more
serious pursuits. Award winning astrophotographer Mark
Sibole uses our new back cell adapter (which accepts
Schmidt-Cassegrain accessories) to capture deep sky objects
with his ETX in breathtaking detail. His shots speak volumes
about what this little scope can do.
Mark is an amazing person who was permanently
disabled after being hit by a car in 1996. He later came
down with multiple sclerosis. MS took away the sight
from his right eye and continues to give him trouble with
equilibrium. He told us, “Without my Meade GoTo
telescope, this would be a very difficult hobby because
looking up makes me dizzy. But my scope’s ability to find
things for me erases that problem completely.”
Whenever his health and cloudy Michigan skies will let
him, you’ll find Mark in his observatory imaging. He’s one
of the most prolific astrophotographers we’ve ever seen,
producing as many quality images in three clear nights as
most astronomers will produce in three clear months.
In Mark’s own words, “Meade’s DSI has given me a whole
new purpose in life – it’s what gets me up in the morning.”
M A R K S I B O L E ’ S S E T- U P : T h e E T X-12 5 p i g g y b a c k e d o n
h i s 10 " L X 2 0 0 , w i t h M e a d e ’ s n e w B a c k C e l l a d a p t e r,
15 m m ex t e n s i o n a d a p t e r, a 3 . 3 f o c a l r e d u c e r t o w i d e n
t h e f i e l d a n d s h o r t e n t h e ex p o s u r e s , a n d a D S I P r o I I
i m a g e r. S e e D S I i m a g e r s ( p g . 122 ) , a n d o t h e r i m a g i n g
a c c e s s o r i e s ( p g . 13 8 ) .
19
.02
E nthusiast
LIGHTBRIDGE
™
S E R IE S
If affordable aperture
is what you’re after,
cross the universe
with a LightBridge
truss-tube Dobsonian.
Mindset:
“I want enough aperture to see really faint objects without
spending a lot of money. I see a simple, economic design as
a plus, not a minus.”
Mantra:
Live large.
Priorities:
Portable affordable aperture. Period.
Goals:
See the deep sky in greater brightness and detail. Capture more
structure from planets, nebulas, galaxies, and star clusters.
20
Performance:
Good for capturing light from distant objects.
Not for terrestrial viewing or astrophotography.
Optical Design:
Dobsonian mounted Newtonian reflector (see pg.47).
Strengths:
Easy to point and use. Largest aperture for the money.
Lightweight and portable. Crisp Meade optics in the simplest
of telescope designs.
Buzz:
Dobsonian scopes have popularized astronomy worldwide
since their invention by a San Francisco monk in the 1950s.
21
.02
Can’t wait to go big? Go Dobsonian.
L ight B ridge ™ S eries Deluxe
G.
H.
C.
B.
D.
A.
I.
E.
F.
“The optics were comparable “Galaxies m81 and m82 contrasted “I can’t recall a telescope that
to my $4000 scope. well against a black background. was more of a joy to test… They are
The LightBridge is a bargain.” Open clusters showed beautiful a dream for observers.”
groupings of pin point stars.”
— Terry Mann, V.P., Astronomical League — Sky & Telescope Magazine
— Sky News Magazine
22
In the 1950s, John Dobson was a San Francisco monk with a simple goal: To share the wonders of
the universe with as many people as possible. The scope design that bears his name started as a way
to help enthusiasts build simple working telescopes out of backyard “junk.” But Dobson’s way to
“go big” changed the face of amateur astronomy forever.
For those who don’t want to polish their own mirrors, scavenge for cardboard tubes, or buy a truck
to carry their telescope, Meade introduces LightBridge ™ truss-tube Dobsonians. These quality
instruments combine the simplicity of a Dobsonian mounted reflector with diffraction-limited
(observatory class) Meade optics in a portable truss design. 8" to 16" telescopes capture more light
from faint deep sky gems than their smaller counterparts, allowing you to see the spiral arms of
dim galaxies and the swirling clouds of far away nebulas.
D i f f r ac t ion-Li m i t e d O p t ic s . Meade optics consistently outperform telescopes of similar and even larger
aperture. Images are detailed, crisp, and full of contrast. A.
M e a de O p t ic a l C oat i ngs . Aluminum coatings with magnesium fluoride overcoat provide bright
images that are full of detail and contrast. b.
M e ta l O p e n-Tru s s D e s ign . For quick take down and set-up without sacrificing stability. d.
Bu i lt-I n P r i m a ry M i r ror C o ol i ng Fa n . Battery powered cooling fan brings the telescope into thermal
equilibrium quickly and efficiently. e.
St e e l R A Rol l e r B e a r i ngs . Steel roller bearings make movements smooth and effortless. f.
A dva nc e d Fou r-R e t ic l e R e d D ot Fi n de r . Four reticles and varying brightness controls allow this
deluxe finder to adjust to your observing needs. g.
2 6 m m QX T M Wi de A ngl e 2" Ey e p i e c e . This premium eyepiece has a 2" barrel, and boasts
a whopping 70° Apparent Field of View (AFOV). H.
0.5 pt 0.5
24
5 pt
It’s not j ust a big t elescope . It’s a big t ele scope t h at goes a n y w h er e .
Ligh tBr i dge t russ-t u be dobs br ea k dow n a n d se t u p qu ick ly. So you ca n
ta k e on e of t h e se m assi v e w i n dows on t h e u n i v erse ou t to you r favor i t e
da r k sk y l ocat ion w i t h ease . A Ligh tBr i dge gi v e s you h igh qua li t y M ea de
opt ics, pr em i u m com pon e n ts, a n d u lt r a porta bi li t y - a ll for a bou t t h e
sa m e pr ice as a n or di n a ry dobson i a n. A n y Ligh tBr i dge dob w i ll gi v e you
a li f e t i m e of observ i ng pleasu r e . Each com e s com ple t e a n d r ea dy to
sta rga ze w i t h f eat u r e s li k e st eel R A roller bea r i ngs, a n a dva nced fou r-
r e t icle r ed dot f i n der, a pr em i u m QX 2" w i de-a ngle e y epi e ce , a pr i m a ry
m i r ror cooli ng fa n, plus a lt i t u de a n d a zi mu t h t e nsion a dj ust m e n ts
t h at h elp k eep you r t elescope on ta rge t. Choose you r Ligh tBr i dge
a pert u r e a n d pr epa r e to cross t h e u n i v erse .
For a computer-guided Newtonian Reflector, see the LXD75 Schmidt-Newtonian (see pg. 39).
LightBridge
DELUXE 12" and 16" 12" Deluxe #1205-05-02 16" Deluxe #1645-05-02
LIGHTBRIDGE
.02
“I waited 46 years
to see the rings of Saturn.
I didn’t want my son to
wait more than five.”
LIGHTBRIDGE
.02
I T WA S T H E F I R S T C L E A R N IGH T SI NC E C H R I S T M A S .
Early-January. Seventeen degrees. I was spending a few minutes alone
with our new telescope before I invited my wife and son Andrew outside
for a look (it’s always easier to figure out new tech gadgets without people
looking over your shoulder). But the family couldn’t wait. The next thing
I knew, two shivering people were pacing back and forth expecting me to
show them something wonderful in our new telescope. Fast.
I crossed my fingers hoping I had set up my scope properly. It was
so easy that I had barely bothered to read the instructions (yes, I’m one
of those people). After consulting the included AutoStar Suite software
on my PC, I went outside and located Saturn with relative ease. At least
I thought the bright object I picked out was Saturn. I wouldn’t be sure for
a few more minutes.
I moved my new LightBridge around and centered the illuminated
red dot finder over the “star” I hoped was Saturn. Imagine my surprise
(and relief) when I turned the focus knob and suddenly saw the ringed
planet staring back at me.
When I told my wife I found Saturn, we agreed to let my son go to
the eyepiece first. For the next five minutes, I was his hero. He just kept
looking and looking, all the while shooting off a barrage of questions
I could barely answer.
I turned the scope toward the moon and was shocked to find this
most obvious of targets to be more detailed and interesting than I ever
imagined. Andrew got a look and I’m pleased to report my hero status
was extended for an additional five minutes.
Since that night we’ve been making a list of favorite night sky objects:
Orion Nebula, Andromeda Galaxy, Jupiter, and of course, Saturn. Now
Andrew asks to go out stargazing one or two nights a week. It’s an excuse
for staying up past bedtime that never fails.
29
.03
Hot S hot
LXD75
™
S E R IE S
One award-winning
astrophotographer calls the
fast, wide field, of the LXD75
Schmidt-Newtonian “a killer
low-cost imaging platform.”
Mindset:
“I want 5" to 10" of aperture on a solid, German Equatorial Mount so
I can see farther and learn to take beautiful astrophotographs without
selling my house first.”
Mantra:
Ready to get serious.
Priorities:
Aperture. Fast focal ratio. Crisp optics. Accurate computerized German
equatorial mount.
Goals:
Observe at a higher level. Learn astrophotography on equipment that won’t
hold me back. Get crisp optics on a great mount that will accept different
optical tube assemblies (OTAs).
30
Performance:
Time-tested platform for wide-field observing and astrophotography.
Optical Design:
Newtonian-Reflector, Schmidt-Newtonian, Achromatic Refractor,
Advanced Coma-Free (see pg. 49).
Strengths:
Stable German equatorial mount. Fast (f/4) focal ratio on 8" and 10"
Schmidt-Newtonians. Optics praised as “best-in-class.” Considered the ideal
platform for Meade’s DSI imagers (see pg. 120).
Buzz:
An LXD75 helped first-time astrophotographer Wolfgang Kloehr discover
a supernova from his backyard in 2005 (see story on pg. 36).
31
.03
Equatorial lovers unite. Observe. Shoot. Enjoy.
L X D 7 5 ™ S eries Newtonian
Schmidt-Newtonian
achromatic Refractor
ADVANCED COMA-FREE
L.
M.
B.
D.
A.
C.
E. F. G. J.
I.
K.
H.
“The Schmidt-Newtonian optics “The LXD75 SN8 and the “The tripod is so stable that
are great. Very, very contrasty. DSI Pro II are such an incredible even when heavy trucks rumble
A very rich field.” match, I would put the images through my street, vibrations
they produce up against systems are dampened quickly”
—Todd Rogelstad, Astrophotographer costing thousands more.”
— George Moromisato, Astrophotographer
— Steve Hamilton, Astrophotographer
32
The LXD75 series is the perfect “step-up” telescope for anyone who wants to see farther and begin
to explore astrophotography with a Meade DSI imager (see pg.120). This series gives you a solid GoTo
mount with time-tested pointing and tracking accuracy and enough aperture to capture the faint
light of tantalizing deep space objects. It also makes premium optics (including the elite Schmidt-
Newtonian optical design that only Meade makes) affordable to everyone. The LXD75 German
Equatorial Mount is the most sturdy, worm-driven, computer-compatible mount you will find for
the money. Add a fast f /4 focal ratio 8" or 10" Schmidt-Newtonian and you have a set-up tailor-made
for Meade’s DSI imagers ( f /4 is the optimum focal ratio for any DSI, DSLR, or CCD imager).
The entire LXD75 series is built around the sturdy LXD75 German Equatorial Mount that can also
be used with other old or new optical tube assemblies in your collection.
H igh-P r e c i s ion Wor m Ge a r s . Located on both axes for ultra-smooth slewing and tracking. d.
H igh-P r e c i s ion Poi n t i ng (H PP ). HPP function adds further accuracy by placing objects in the exact
center of the field of view so you can confirm deep sky objects at the faintest limits of the scope’s capabilities. e.
P e r iodic E r ror C or r e c t ion (PE C ). Corrects periodic error in the RA axis, thereby minimizing guiding
corrections during long-exposure CCD astrophotography. f.
9 - Sp e e d D r i v e C on t rol s . Choose speeds easily with the AutoStar® controller. Rapid slew rate of 7.5 º/second
saves slewing time all night long. Slowest rate of 1x sidereal allows careful centering of objects. g.
H e av y-D u t y Tr i p od. Variable-height field tripod with spreader bar provides the stability and vibration
dampening required for visual observation and long-exposure CCD astrophotography. h.
Au to Sta r ® c on t rol l e r . Legendary user-friendly controller finds things in the night sky for you (see pg.12). J.
26mm Series 4000 ™ Eyepiece. Wide field of view makes stargazing easy. Quality optics for high-contrast images. L.
UHTC.™ Our exotic multi-layer optical coatings optimize light transmission. Image brightness is increased by 15% over standard
coatings. It’s like adding up to an extra inch of aperture (depending on scope size). Objects appear dramatically brighter (see pg. 68). M.
LXD75 N L XD75 6" NEWTONIAN REFLECTOR LXD75-ACF L XD75 8" ADVANCED COMA-FREE
#0605-75-11 #0810-75-02
LXD75 SN L XD75 6" SCHMIDT-NEWTONIAN L XD75 8" SCHMIDT-NEWTONIAN L XD75 10" SCHMIDT-NEWTONIAN
UHTC Optical Coatings included UHTC Optical Coatings included UHTC Optical Coatings included
48 lbs total net weight 69 lbs total net weight 85 lbs total net weight
Optical Tube: 7.1" dia, 27" length Optical Tube: 10" dia, 29.5" length Optical Tube: 11.9" dia, 36.1" length
8 d batteries (user supplied) 8 d batteries (user supplied) 8 d batteries (user supplied)
Slew Speed: 2x sidereal to 7.5˚/sec Slew Speed: 2x sidereal to 7.5˚/sec Slew Speed: 2x sidereal to 7.5˚/sec
in 9 increments in 9 increments in 9 increments
Guide Speed: 2x sidereal Guide Speed: 2x sidereal Guide Speed: 2x sidereal
LXD75 AR L XD75 5" ACHROMATIC REFRACTOR L XD75 6" ACHROMATIC REFRACTOR Also available:
LXD75 Mount Only
5" (127mm) aperture 6" (152mm) aperture German Equatorial Mount
Achromatic Refractor Achromatic Refractor with #497 Deluxe AutoStar
f/9.3 focal ratio (1180mm) f/8 focal ratio (1219mm) #37-7500-00
#497 AutoStar #497 AutoStar
(30,000+ object database) (30,000+ object database)
8 x 50mm finder 8 x 50mm finder
series
26mm Series 4000 Super Plössl 26mm Series 4000 Super Plössl
49 lbs total net weight 72 lbs total net weight
6.3" dia, 41" length 8" dia, 42" length
™
LXD75
For a full list of specifications go to www.meade.com. Specifications are subject to change without notice.
Choosing the right LXD75 ™
Add a Meade Lunar Planetary or Deep Sky Imager. See what you’ve been missing.
As long as you’re moving up to a polar-aligned, large-aperture scope, you’d be crazy not to at least give deep
space astrophotography a try. Meade’s user-friendly and affordable imagers make it easier than ever. See page
116 for our full line of imagers.
We’re not saying everyone who buys a new LXD75 ™ telescope and a Deep Sky Imager ™ will
discover a supernova their first few weeks out. But that’s exactly what happened to first-time
astrophotographer Wolfgang Kloehr. Here’s his story. I owned a small telescope for a long
time. But I didn’t go out very often. From time to time I wondered how much it would cost to get
into astrophotography. Then in May 2005, I discovered the 8" LXD75 Schmidt-Newtonian and Deep
Sky Imager at a small shop in Wurtzburg, Germany. I bought them and started taking pictures.
Five weeks later, on June 27th, 2005, I was comparing some photos of the Whirlpool Galaxy (M51)
with ones I had taken earlier when I saw a small bright spot that wasn’t there before. I checked all
the usual sources for minor planets, supernovas, variable stars, or any explanation of a bright object
in M51. There was nothing. Could this be a star exploding in a distant galaxy? I had to find out. For
the next few nights I fought cloudy skies to confirm the discovery.
My first ever dispatch to Dan Green at CBAT (Central Bureau For Astronomical Telegrams) went as
well as could be expected. Mr Green patiently explained that I needed to provide better coordinates
and more positive confirmation photos. I was new to this.
When the weather went from bad to worse, I figured my chance for a first discovery was gone.
Someone was bound to have seen this bright new thing by now. On June 30th, the sky cleared just
long enough to get another photo. I submitted it and got an immediate email response.
The heading announced a new supernova (SN 2005cs in M51). Two independent sources in the U.S.
and Japan had confirmed the discovery. Was I the official discoverer? Was my name included in a
long list of discoverers? Did I even make the list at all? I found the supernova on the International
Astronomical Union bulletin and scrolled to the column “Discoverer.” There was only one name:
Wolfgang Kloehr.
Wo l f ga n g ’ s d i s c ov e ry k i t : Th e fa st f o c al
rat i o a n d s o l i d e q uato r i a l m o u n t o f t h e
8" L X D 7 5 S c h m i dt- N e w to n i a n m a k e i t t he
per f e c t c o m pa n i o n to M e a d e ’ s D e e p S ky
I m a g e r . To g e t h e r t h e y m a k e a s t r o p h o -
tog r a p h y ( a n d d i s c ov e ry ) e a s i e r .
36
A
B
A: reference
B : d i s c ov e ry
wolfgang kloehr
s c h w e i n f u rt, g e r m a n y
supernova discovery
l x d 7 5 / d e e p s ky i m ag e r
37
The 6" Newtonian Reflector is like a little brother to our Dobsonians (see pg. 20). It shares many of
the same practical benefits: An inexpensive Newtonian design. Fewer parts. Nothing to go wrong.
Unlike a Dobsonian, the lxd75 Newtonian has a Deluxe AutoStar ® controller and motorized drives
that will automatically GoTo and track over 30,000 celestial objects. The scope has enough aperture
to offer a serious step up from the average starter scope. But it is still lightweight, portable, and
relatively inexpensive.
+ Pa r a bol ic P r i m a ry M i r ror . Significant because many cheaper Newtonians are merely spherical. Quality Meade
optics mean the best possible views.
+ D e lu x e Au to Sta r C on t rol l e r . The industry’s most advanced and widely used computer controller. Offers
professional quality GoTo slewing and tracking plus guided tours, object descriptions, fun facts, and astrophotography tools (see pg. 13).
+ Au to Sta r Su i t e ™ Sof t wa r e . Astronomer Edition planetarium software helps you learn the night sky. It also lets
you control your telescope from your PC (Windows® compatible).
+ 2" Fo c u s e r w i t h 1 . 2 5 " a da p t e r . Rack-and-pinion focuser is the perfect marriage of touch and precision.
Simple is beautiful.
38
The Schmidt-Newtonian is a design so unique, only Meade makes it. This revolutionary design gives
you the best of both worlds: Observing. Astrophotography. It does it all. The fast f /4 focal ratio
(8" and 10" models) is an ideal match for Meade’s user-friendly Deep Sky Imagers. And thanks to
world-famous Meade corrector lens technology, Schmidt-Newtonians have just ½ the coma of
standard Newtonians. (coma is a fuzzy-star aberration that occurs in standard Newtonian and
Dobsonian reflectors).
These scopes are versatile, portable, and high-tech. Online forums positively rave about the
optics. Astrophotographer Steve Hamilton is impressed by “the tack-sharp round stars, exquisite
detail, and flat field” of these premium scopes. They are an “astrophotographer’s dream,” perfect
for taking low-power images of objects so faint you can’t even see them with the naked eye. The
Schmidt-Newtonian is the flagship of the lxd75 line. Buy one and let the fun begin.
+ Fa s t f /4 Fo c a l R at io s (8 " a n d 1 0 " ). Shorter exposure times and wide fields of view yield spectacular views
and photos of nebulas, clusters, and galaxies.
Wat e r Wh i t e Gl a s s C or r e c tor Le n s . Fully corrects for spherical aberration for pinpoint star images.
+ Water White glass increases light transmission by more than 10% over scopes using soda lime glass.
P y r e x ® P r i m a ry M i r ror . Provides exceptional thermal stability versus competing models using standard plate glass.
+ Au to Sta r ® C on t rol l e r . The industry’s most advanced and widely used computer controller. Offers professional
+ quality GoTo slewing and tracking plus guided tours, object descriptions, fun facts, and astrophotography tools. (See pg. 13)
2" Fo c u s e r w i t h 1 . 2 5 " a da p t e r . Rack-and-pinion focuser is the perfect marriage of touch and precision.
+ 8 x5 0 Ac h rom at ic Vi e w f i n de r . For easy location and centering of deep sky objects.
+ 2 6 m m Se r i e s 4 0 0 0 ™ Su p e r P l ö s s l Ey e p i e c e . For sharp 52˚ wide-angle views.
+
39
Observe like Galileo with our 5" and 6" achromatic refractors. This classic telescope design is also
the most expensive per inch of aperture. But refractors provide incomparable resolution in high-
contrast images of the moon, planets, and deep space objects. Less expensive than an apochromat
(APO, see pg. 45), these 2-element refractors are an excellent choice for any astronomer who’s
looking for the crisp resolution of a refractor at an affordable price.
+ Deluxe AutoStar® Controller. The industry’s most advanced and widely used computer controller. Offers professional
quality GoTo slewing and tracking plus guided tours, object descriptions, fun facts, and astrophotography tools (see pg.13).
A big dose of
unobstructed
aperture.
40
If you’re looking for the optical quality of a Meade lx90-acf Advanced Coma-Free on a German
Equatorial Mount, this is your scope. As a less costly alternative to other Meade Advaced Coma-
Free scopes, the lxd75-acf is an excellent way to step up to an 8" computer-driven scope.
+ Wat e r Wh i t e Gl a s s C or r e c tor Le n s . Fully corrects for spherical aberration for pinpoint star images.
Water White glass increases light transmission by more than 10% over scopes with soda lime glass.
+ O v e r s i z e d P y r e x ® P r i m a ry M i r ror . Only Meade manufactures primary mirrors larger than the scope’s
listed aperture to capture more light (see pg. 87). Pyrex provides exceptional thermal stability versus competing models that use
standard plate glass.
+ Au to Sta r C on t rol l e r . The industry’s most advanced and widely used computer controller. Offers professional
quality GoTo slewing and tracking plus guided tours, object descriptions, fun facts, and astrophotography tools (see pg.13).
+ Sa m e op t ic a l s y s t e m a s t h e l x 9 0 -ac f. The Meade LXD75 Advaced Coma-Free gives you the same legendary
diffraction-limited optics as the LX90-ACF series.
An Advanced Coma-Free
for German equatorial
mount lovers.
41
“ T h e D S I P r o I I a n d LXD75 SN8 make getting astrophotographs almost eas y.
T h e y a r e a n i n c r e d i b l e m atch. The focus really “snaps” and is completely f lat across
t h e e n t i r e f ra m e . I w o u l d put the astrophotographs they produce up against s ystems
a n d i m a g e r s c o s t i n g t h o u s ands of dollars more. To see these images come alive on your
s c r e e n i s really worth all the time you put into them.”
LXD75
.03
peter kennet / m8 - lagoon nebula / lxd75 steve hamilton / m81 - bode’s galaxy / lxd75 / dsi pro ii peter kennet / m45 - pleiades / lxd75
43
Refractor: Captures light with a lens.
44
EXHIBIT 3 Optical Systems
For What? Excellent for bright objects like the Moon, planets,
double stars, clusters. Good for light-polluted city stargazing
and daytime land viewing. Aperture limitations make
refractors a secondary visual choice for faint deep sky nebulas,
clusters and galaxies. However, they are prized for wide-field
astrophotography (see pg. 104).
Achromatic:
Achromatic Refractors have two lenses with a thin air space in between
them. This simple design is very effective and affordable. Because
f
residual color (due to unequal focusing of different colors by the
lens glass) can cause a slight halo around bright objects and the
moon, more expensive Apochromatic refractors were developed.
Apochromatic:
Apochromatic Refractors use two (or preferably three) elements of
a much more expensive extra-low dispersion (ED) glass to color-
f
correct the image and eliminate color fringing. Meade’s triplet
design does this especially well (see pg. 100). These instruments offer
some of the finest views in all astronomy at their respective apertures.
Newtonian: Newtonian Ref lectors are the classic Ref lector design. They may also
be mounted on an equatorial mount for computer-guided GoTo capabilities. (See pg. 38)
D iagonal mirror parabolic primary mirror
Dobsonian: Dobsonian telescopes are Newtonian Ref lectors def ined by their
mount—a simple box-like design that allows the scope to rotate side-to-side
and pivot up and down. They are the most simple, no-frills telescopes you
f
can buy and are popular in larger apertures as the most inexpensive cure for
“aperture fever.”
Exclusive to Meade, this design provides pinpoint stellar images over an D iagonal mirror spherical
primary mirror
What About It? German astronomer Bernhard Schmidt made the first compound (also known as Catadioptric) telescope in 1930.
A Compound telescope combines the best features of a refractor and a reflector into one compact telescope. Light travels through a
correcting lens at the top of the tube to a concave mirror at the bottom of the tube, back to a small secondary mirror behind the lens,
and is finally focused at the rear of the telescope. Their excellent optical performance, compact size, and relative affordability make
compound telescopes by far the most popular design in use today. To a true astronomer, their profile is every bit as familiar as the
long-tube refractor is to the novice. Only Meade compound telescopes feature oversized primary mirrors (see pg. 87).
Who Uses Them? Serious astronomers, astrophotographers, researchers, colleges, universities, public and private observatories all over
the world. Also casual observers who want a combination of research quality optics, large aperture, and portability.
For What? Premium astrophotography and observation of everything from the Moon and planets to faint deep sky nebulas, clusters
and galaxies. Scientific measurements. Discoveries of comets and supernovas. Very portable in small to medium apertures. Often
mounted permanently in apertures over 14". Smaller apertures practical for daytime land viewing.
Meade Scopes Available: Maksutov-Cassegrain: ETX PE 90mm and 125mm (pg. 2). Advanced Coma-Free: LXD75-ACF 8” (pg 41),
LX90-ACF 8"-12" (pg. 50) LX200-ACF 8"-16" (pg. 62), LX400 10"-16" and 20" (pg. 78).
of continuous production, Meade has stopped producing Schmidt-Cassegrain optics in favor aspheric
Maksutov-Cassegrain: This design is much like the Schmidt-Cassegrain, but with a spherical
corrector lens. This makes an even more compact telescope. Maksutov’s are popular for f spherical
correcting plate
both their portability and their textbook-perfect optical performance. But they are dif-
ficult to make right. Meade ETX’s rank among the world’s top Maksutov-Cassegrains.
spherical primary mirror
the RC design in most of the world’s top observatories and NASA’s Hubble Telescope.
custom figured
Unfortunately, Ritchey-Chrétiens are very expensive to build (their prices make cars
correcting plate
sound cheap). In 2004, Meade engineers developed a radical new design that makes
RC performance available to everyone. By using a spherical primary mirror, a full
aperture corrector lens, and a hyperbolic secondary mirror, Meade’s Advanced Coma-
Free (ACF) produces a coma-free, flat field-of-view. The ACF actually corrects for
astigmatism better than the original (RC) design. Without a degree in optical engineering,
what that means to you is that Meade’s Advanced Coma Frees make observatory-class
optics available for roughly one-fifth of what amateurs had to pay in the past.
LX90-ACF
S E R IE S
™
Mindset:
I’m hooked on Astronomy. Observing. Imaging. You name it.
I’m looking for the absolute best 8" to 12" Schmidt-Cassegrain
I can afford. I want the highest-quality optics and a rock-solid,
computer-guided mount.
Mantra:
No clouds, please.
Priorities:
Legendary optics. High-precision tracking. Aperture. Stability.
Auto alignment. GPS.
Goals:
Join the community of dedicated backyard astronomers.
Treat my family and friends to the ultimate tour of the universe.
Begin to take astrophotographs like a pro.
50
Performance:
The ultimate all-around machine for the money.
Optical Design:
Advanced Coma-Free. (See pg. 49)
Strengths:
Industry leading optics. Precise computer driven mount.
Buzz:
Sky & Telescope wrote, “For a general-purpose telescope,
this is one of the best ones I’ve ever tested out-of-the-box.”
51
.04
Welcome to serious astronomy. Here’s your scope.
lx 9 0 - A C F ™
ADVANCED COMA-FREE
B.
K. F. G. H.
C.
D.
I.
A. J.
E.
“The computer pointing “An LX90-ACF lets you take “I was interested to see if
was 100% accurate photos that look like they came the LX90 would live up to its
(scout’s honor, not one straight from a Palomar Mountain (long-exposure astrophotography)
miss in hundreds of Observatory sky survey.” claims. It certainly does.
GoTo moves).” And then some.”
— Sky & Telescope magazine — Tom King , Astrophotographer — Sky & Telescope magazine
52
The lx90-acf ™ can locate over 30,000 objects including itself. Turn it on and the built-in Sony® gps
receiver immediately determines your precise date, time, and location. In just minutes, your scope
is ready to give you a tour of the most spectacular sights in the universe with gps precision. With
all the features of a legendary lx90 Schmidt-Cassegrain, plus the ability to listen to and track
satellites, Meade’s new lx90-acf has it all.
When you consider competing methods of alignment (synchronizing your telescope’s computer
with the night sky), nothing is easier than Meade’s AutoAlign.™ Not even competing three-object
alignment methods. That’s because lx90-acf telescopes are smart scopes that know the night sky
right out of the box (see AutoAlign pg. 15). When it comes to industry-leading optics, oversized
primary mirrors, depth of features, and value for your dollar, the lx90-acf is the best Schmidt-
Cassegrain you can find that can find itself.
Au toA l ign ™ M a k e s A l ign m e n t E a s y. Aligns your telescope for you while you watch. Allows you to fine
tune alignment with two stars it finds for you automatically when you turn it on (see pg. 15). A.
A dva nc e d C om a-Fr e e O p t ic s . Only Meade individually figures their Water White glass corrector lenses and
Pyrex ® primary and secondary mirrors for observatory-class light transmission, temperature stability, smoothness and image
correction. Our optics lead the industry (see pg. 128). B.
Exc lu s i v e O v e r s i z e d P r i m a ry M i r ror . Meade primary mirrors are larger than their listed apertures
(the actual diameter of the 8" LX90-ACF primary mirror is 8.25"). This extra ¼” yields a wider, fully illuminated field of
view and allows you to see the light competing Schmidt-Cassegrains leave behind. c.
R igi d D ua l -For k Mou n t. Cast aluminum fork mount provides a rock-solid platform for astrophotography and
visual observation. Two forks are better than one. d.
LX 2 0 0 -AC F ™- Se r i e s Tr i p od. The LX90-ACF comes with the same sturdy and adjustable field tripod as the
LX200-ACF. For steady observing and imaging. e.
Sm a rt D r i v e ™. Provides Periodic Error Correction in the RA axis (in polar mode) over the course of one or more
training periods, thereby minimizing guiding corrections during long-exposure astrophotography (see pg. 92). f.
9 - Sp e e d D r i v e C on t rol s . Choose speeds easily with the AutoStar® controller. Rapid slew rate of 7º/second
saves slewing time all night long. Slowest rate of .01x sidereal allows careful guiding for astrophotography. Includes precision
adjustable guiding speeds for pinpoint astrophotography (see pg. 69). g.
Au to Sta r ® C on t rol l e r . The industry standard. Used by more astronomers than any other system for
everything from backyard observing and imaging to observatory research. And the software is fully upgradable. You can
download firmware updates, guided tours, and timely objects like comets and new discoveries for free at Meade.com. With
AutoStar Update, your telescope will grow with you for years to come (see pg. 13). h.
Au to Sta r Su i t e ™ Sof t wa r e . Easy-to-use planetarium software allows you to see what’s in the sky tonight.
Plan observing sessions, print star charts, even control your telescope from your PC. i.
UHTC.™ Our exotic multi-layer optical coatings optimize light transmission. Image brightness is increased by 15% over standard
coatings. It’s like adding up to an extra inch of aperture (depending on scope size). Objects appear dramatically brighter (see pg. 68). K.
LX90-ACF L X90-ACF 8" #0810-90-01 L X90-ACF 10" #1010-90-01 L X90-ACF 12" #1210-90-01
For a full list of specifications go to www.meade.com. Specifications are subject to change without notice.
telescopes that know the night sky right out of the box.
.04
Choosing the LX90-ACF.™ An easy decision.
55
2" 4" 6" 8"
56
EXHIBIT 4 Understanding
Aperture
An astrophotograph and a look through a telescope both inspire wonder. But in different
ways. Due to the natural limitations of the human eye, a long-exposure astrophotograph of
the Great Orion Nebula (m42) will be infinitely more detailed and colorful than what you can
possibly see through the telescope’s eyepiece.
Despite this truth, no photograph can compare with the experience of standing under a clear
sky and looking into the heart of a star factory 1,500 light years away with your own eyes. After
all, you are witnessing creation. It’s sort of like comparing a photo of the Grand Canyon to
actually going there.
Depending on the steadiness of the atmosphere, the darkness of your location, and how dark-
adapted your eyes are, a large scope will turn distant galaxies, star clusters, nebulas and
planets into truly magnificent sights you will never forget.
The larger the aperture, the brighter and higher resolution your image.
Aperture is about gathering light. Period. The human eye can only gather as much light as can squeeze through
the pupil of your eye. Not much. So the real purpose of a telescope is not magnification—it’s gathering more
light. The bigger the aperture, the brighter the image. You won’t enjoy looking at a dim object, no matter
how big you make it. That’s why any experienced astronomer will tell you aperture is everything.
As a general rule, an 8-inch telescope has four times the light gathering power of a 4-inch telescope. The
photo-illustrations on this page were created to simulate the view through telescopes of different apertures
at the same magnification. Examine them and it’s easy to see why bigger is better.
The main caveat to the “bigger is better” rule is portability. Telescopes above 10" become increasingly more
difficult to transport to your favorite dark sky location (not an issue if you plan on a home observatory or
roll-off shed).
But the best scope for you is the one you will actually use. Most amateurs consider an 8" scope the perfect
compromise between brightness and portability.
57
“ I d e c i d e d to b u y t h e L X90 based on all of the online reviews prais ing it as an
e x c e l l e n t te l es c o p e fo r t h e money. I’m now taking photos with the Meade Deep Sky Image r
a n d e x p l o r i n g w o n d e r s I never dreamed poss ible here in the glow of the Big Apple.
N i g h t a f te r n i g h t , A u to S tar reliably starts, aligns, and locks onto objects with perfect
p r e c i s i o n. I’ve never experienced a s ingle glitch.”
—mike sabina
LX90-ACF
.04
eric madeleine / m57 - ring nebula / lx90
ed roach / saturn / lx90 lee zagar / jupiter / lx90 / DSI
59
Steve Hamilton is a former naval aviator and
forums with over 6500 subscribers. He and his L X90 have produced an impressive
60
My love of the night sky began as a Navy But I was helped along and encouraged by all these
pilot. I used to fly back and forth all night great imagers who would go, “Nice image Steve, but
on airborne early warning duty. We called it try this next time…” That’s fantastic. I look back at
“drilling holes in the sky.” The night sky was my first few months in imaging and think, “where
amazing so I’d take along binocs and enjoy the would I have been without that?”
view. At 30,000 feet over the Eastern Pacific, Now I find myself answering a lot of the same
the Milky Way is so bright; you’d swear you questions that I asked when I was first starting out.
were looking at clouds out your window. It’s just a natural progression where you start giving
61
ast rophotogr a ph y: st ev e h a m ilton / m100 - som br ero ga la x y / lx90 / dsi pro
.05
MASTER
LX200-ACF
S E R IE S
™
Rick Beno: Retired engineer, Arizona Sky Village resident, LX200 owner.
Mindset:
I’m in love with observing and imaging. I’m ready for the
most exquisite views available. I like portability, but I may
also be considering a large aperture permanent installation.
Mantra:
Sleep? What’s sleep?
Priorities:
The finest optics. Unbelievably precise mechanics. Pinpoint
tracking. A rugged and proven imaging platform.
Goals:
Share the wonders of the universe with family and friends.
Take astrophotographs with the most widely used research
telescope in the world. Perhaps make a discovery or two.
62
Performance:
The ultimate all-around instrument. Period.
Optical Design:
Advanced Coma-Free
Strengths:
Unique, industry-leading optical design. Crisp, flatter,
field of view. Research-capable pointing and tracking.
Huge user support network.
Buzz:
Sky & Telescope magazine says many feel Meade’s Advanced
CF optics are the biggest news in amateur telescopes “in more
than a decade, maybe even a quarter century.”
63
.05
The aCF revolution. A Hubble for your backyard.
L X 2 0 0 - A C F ™ S eries
ADVANCED COMA-FREE™
A. B.
G.
H. I.
K.
D.
C.
E. F.
Z ero I ma g e - S hift
J. M icrofocuser .
P. Clay Sherrod calls
the Zero Image-Shift
Microfocuser, “one of the
nicest features ever put into
a telescope.”
“I have absolutely no hesitation in “Advanced Coma-Free optics make the “Provides excellent performance
recommending the LX200 series. LX200 the best commercially available in all critical areas while adding a
I can attest to the wonderful telescope you can buy for the money. level of technical luxury that is
hands-off convenience and sheer There are people who will argue truly powerful and impressive.”
fun of the motorized goto.” with that. But it’s true.”
— Sky & Telescope magazine
— Sky & Telescope magazine — Dr. P. Clay Sherrod, Arkansas Sky Observatory
64
The most widely used research telescope on earth now comes with the most advanced optical system
in space. Meade’s lx200-acf ™ brings advanced coma-free optics within reach of aspiring astronomers
everywhere. Nearly every observatory reflector in the world is a Ritchey-Chrétien, including
NASA’s Hubble Space telescope. Now you can have the performance the professionals expect. The
lx200-acf combines a revolutionary new optical system with the field-proven mechanical features
of the original lx200 — the most widely used research-grade telescope in astronomy today.
Dr. Clay Sherrod says, “I personally know over 100 amateur astronomers using lx200s out-of-the-
box (new ones and old ones) to provide research data to professionals around the world. One
friend of mine used his 14" lx200 to discover binary asteroids using light curves. It’s remarkable
stuff that only the pros could do before.”
But the lx200-acf offers inspiring views for the recreational astronomer too. After decades of
Schmidt-Cassegrain optical designs dominating the market, the lx200-acf’s evolution to patent-
pending Advanced RC optics is the biggest news in astronomy since, well, the original lx200.
A dva nc e d ( f /1 0) C om a-Fr e e O p t ic s . The crisp, flatter, coma-free images of the RC optical design have
long been coveted by astrophotographers and researchers (who sadly could not afford them). Such astronomers are now
calling Meade’s affordable Advanced Coma-Free optics “a gift,” “perfect,” “textbook,” and “lovely.” A.
A dva nc e d C om a-Fr e e O p t ic s . Only Meade individually figures their Water White glass corrector lenses and
Pyrex® primary and secondary mirrors for observatory-class light transmission, temperature stability, smoothness and image
correction. Our optics lead the industry (see pg. 128). b.
Z e ro I m age - Sh i f t M ic rofo c u s e r . Allows you to obtain precise focus with no image movement using
four push-button speeds (fast, medium, slow, fine) on the AutoStar controller. Like this entire list, only Meade has it. c.
Sm a rt Mou n t.™ Constantly refines pointing accuracy each time an object is centered and updated. Works in equatorial
or altazimuth alignment. An indispensable feature for permanent installations (which Meade has more of than any other
manufacturer). e.
Sm a rt D r i v e .™ Provides Permanent Periodic Error Correction (PPEC) on both axes over the course of one or more
training periods, thereby minimizing guiding corrections during long-exposure astrophotography (see pg. 92). f.
Son y ® GPS R e c e i v e r Se n s or . Automatically inputs precise time, date, and geographical location to help
quickly and precisely align your telescope. Gets a satellite fix in just a few seconds despite obstructions like trees or buildings. g.
Au toA l ign .™ Sky & Telescope says, “Simply turn it on and this telescope aligns itself to the sky all by itself, ready to
show you thousands of objects at the push of a button.” h.
Au to Sta r ® I I C on t rol l e r . AutoStar on steroids. Features “Hot Keys” for quick access to over 150,000 celestial
objects. Operate features like Smart Drive,™ Smart Mount,™ and the Zero Image-Shift Microfocuser with the push of a button.
Download software updates, guided tours, and timely objects like satellites, comets and new discoveries free at Meade.com (see pg. 86). i.
Ro c k- Sol i d Fi e l d Tr i p od. Depending on aperture, scopes come with an adjustable Sturdy Field Tripod, Giant
Field Tripod, or Super Giant Field Tripod to give you a solid, research-grade foundation. J.
UHTC.™ Our exotic multi-layer optical coatings optimize light transmission. Image brightness is increased by 15% over standard
coatings. It’s like adding up to an extra inch of aperture (depending on the scope size). Objects appear dramatically brighter (see pg. 68). K.
LX200-ACF L X200-ACF 8" #0810-60-02 L X200-ACF 10" #1010-60-02 L X200-ACF 12" #1210-60-02
L X200-ACF 14" #1410-60-02 L X200-ACF 16" on Super Giant Field Tripod #1610-60-02
AutoStar II AutoStar II
(150,000 object database) (150,000 object database)
8 x 50mm viewfinder 8 x 50mm viewfinder
26mm 5000 5-element 26mm 5000 5-element
Plössl eyepiece Plössl eyepiece
UHTC Optical Coatings included UHTC Optical Coatings included
166 lbs total net weight 360 lbs total net weight
ota dia 15.8", ota length 31" ota dia 17.5", ota length 33"
8 c batteries (user supplied) Batteries: not applicable
Slew speed: 2x sidereal Slew speed: 2x sidereal
to 8˚/sec in 9 increments to 8˚/sec in 9 increments
Guide Speed: .01 to 2x sidereal Guide Speed: .01 to 2x sidereal
For a full list of specifications go to www.meade.com. Specifications are subject to change without notice.
LX200-acf
#1610-60-02A Z
.05
As an LX200-ACF owner, you’re in good company.
™
Corrector plate technology. The “advanced” in Advanced Coma-Free (ACF). A traditional RC telescope is
an open tube reflector with expensive hyperbolic primary and secondary mirrors that produces coma-free images
(see pg. 49). Meade engineers pioneered an ACF telescope by combining a hyperbolic secondary with a
corrector-lens-and-spherical-primary combination that performs as one hyperbolic element. This closed tube,
patent pending design has many advantages including better correction for astigmatism than a traditional
Ritchey-Chrétien. As one beta-tester put it, “The images through these telescopes have all the characteristics of
a traditional RC: Outstanding contrast and image quality. Pinpoint stars to the edges of the field. Finer planetary
details. More structure from nebulous objects. More stars in the field of view (without the diffraction spikes
inherent in the traditional RC design). These are incredible optics made affordable.”
Accurate pointing and tracking. AutoStar® is the industry’s standard GoTo technology. AutoStar® II goes even
further with more than 150,000 deep sky objects, plus built-in features like Smart Mount™, Smart Drive™,
High-Precision (HP) Pointing and more (see pg. 92). HP Pointing allows astrophotographers to achieve extremely
fine-tuned centering of deep sky objects using nearby stars. Sky & Telescope magazine said, “Not only was it
accurate, it was fast. The LX200 usually took no longer than 10 to 25 seconds to slew to and center an object…when [HP
pointing] is activated… Meade promises a pointing accuracy of 1 arc-minute. I can confirm this amazing figure.”
The freshest optical system in town. If it isn’t clear by now, let us point out that Meade Advanced RC
optics are the Next Big Thing in astronomy. The Schmidt-Cassegrain design has proven its value for decades. It
has also been affordable for decades. But flatter-field, coma-free Advanced Coma-Frees are the future.
The UHTC ™ Advantage. Meade Ultra-High Transmission Coatings (UHTC) are an amazing scientific break-
through that increase brightness by up to 15% compared with standard coatings (see pg. 68).
Adding on to your LX200-ACF. Your LX200-ACF is the perfect foundation for a lifetime of exploration.
See pages 130-143 for additional accessories that will help your scope grow with you for years to come.
a s t ro p h o t o g r a p h y : m a r k d e r e g t / m 1 3 - h e rc u l e s c l u s t e r / l x 4 0 0
68
EXHIBIT 6 Faster slew speeds
“ No t only wa s i t a c c ur at e , M E A D E L X 9 0 - A C F 7 25
i t wa s fa s t. T he L X 2 0 0 u s u a l ly t ook
M E A D E L X 2 0 0 - A C F 8 23
no l o nge r t h a n 10 t o 25 s e c o nd s t o
s l e w t o a nd c e n t e r a n ob je c t.” M E A D E L X 4 0 0 - A C F 8 23
Shifting speeds.
Variable speeds let you GoTo objects at maximum speed
then select a slower speed to fine tune placement for
astrophotography or scientific measurements. LX90-
ACF scopes have 9 variable speeds. LX200-ACF and
LX400-ACF models offer 185 different speeds!
69
Dr. P. Clay Sherrod (“Dr. Clay”
to astronomers everywhere)
founded the Arkansas Sky
Observatory in 1971. He is a
widely respected scientific
researcher, beta tester, and
critic of everyone’s telescopes.
Including ours.
70
Q You’ve told us the 16" LX200-ACF is now your favorite telescope. Why? A It’s
really tough to talk about the new ACF series without making its predecessor look bad.
Schmidt-Cassegrains are great scopes and Meade has mastered the art of manufacturing
them. But Meade took the Schmidt-Cassegrain design as far as it could go. Technology needs to evolve. The new
Advanced Coma-Free design is a ref lection of that. Q Where exactly did the Schmidt-Cassegrain
design leave room for improvement? A Well, image fall-off for one. The average guy looking at the center
of the f ield of view might never notice. But astrophotographers and experienced observers always knew there
was light loss around the very edges of a Schmidt-Cassegrain’s f ield of view. It could be as much as 30-35%.
Q Does the new ACF design f ix that? A Oh yes. I expected to be blown away. And I was. I’m not seeing the
same image fall-off in the new ACF series at all. You can now use the entire f ield of view the telescope gives
you. Q Can you give us an example? A When I do asteroid work, I use a program that measures the light and
position of an asteroid using the relative brightness of other stars in the f ield of view. The more stars the better.
Out in Leo (where there are relatively fewer stars) I was lucky to lock onto f ive or six stars in the f ield of view
with any brand of Schmidt-Cassegrain. Peripheral stars were of little or no use. A week ago, I did an asteroid
f ield test. Same aperture. Same exposure time. Same CCD imager. In the Schmidt-Cassegrain, I was only able
to lock onto 9 stars. With the new Advanced Coma-Free optics, I was able to capture 26 stars. 26! Just because
of the f latness and clarity of that f ield of view. Q What does that mean for the recreational astronomer?
A These Advanced Coma-Frees are really a major step up in consumer telescope optics. Until now, there was
™
LX200-acf
not an affordable telescope for the amateur that provided a true research-quality f ield of view. For thousands
less than traditional RC’s, this new ACF optical design gives you an unprecedented view in terms of color, con-
trast, and image quality. From edge-to-edge. For CCD imaging, it will allow the astronomer to grow his hobby
well into the future without feeling limited by his telescope’s optics.
.05
72
1956 Sees shooting star at summer camp
Shoemaker-Levy 9
Comet discoveries
1994
1991
1993
1993-94
1990-92
Getting a new telescope is like starting a new relationship. It’s not
just some bucket of bolts and glass. If you’re willing, it can become your
partner in exploring the universe.
I named my first telescope “Echo” back in 1960. And I still have it. In
fact, it has a Coronado PST solar telescope piggybacked on it now and I use
it for looking at the Sun in H-alpha all the time.
Years later, I got the first 12" Schmidt Camera Meade ever made. When
we got it home, I noticed this massive thing would probably displace every
other telescope in our observatory. When I was a teenager in Montreal, our
astronomy club had this piggy bank called Obadiah. Whenever there was
enough money, Obadiah, the observatory pig , would go shopping for
with Meade’s new LX400s and will add one to the family as soon as he can think of a suitable name.
Tom Glinos and Wendee
74
David searches for comets with a Meade 12" Schmidt Camera, a 16" LX200GPS, and a 10" LX200 classic. He is very impressed
“ I p u r c h a s e d t h e L X 2 0 0 - ACF to image from my light-polluted home in Brisbane, Austra-
l i a . T h e m a i n r e a s o n I chose this scope was for the Advanced Coma-Free optics.
I w a s p r e v i o u s l y u s i n g a competitor’s 11" Schmidt-Cassegrain and have found the 10"
™
.05
77
.06
G URU
LX400-ACF
S E R IE S
™
Mindset:
I’m ready for the observatory-level research telescope of my
dreams. I can’t wait to image, explore, and discover with one
of the most advanced telescopes ever made.
Mantra:
Live to explore.
Priorities:
Ritchey-Chretién-like performance I can afford.
A flat field perfect for astrophotography. A scope that can
handle large-chip CCD imaging. The most mechanically
tricked-out, precise, and user-friendly mount on the market.
Goals:
Take astrophotographs worthy of publication. Contribute to
scientific research. Share astronomy with family and friends.
Participate in supernova, comet, and asteroid searches.
78
Performance:
Absolute state-of-the art system. Hands down.
Optical Design:
Advanced Coma-Free.
Strength:
Unparalleled crisp, flatter field of view. Observatory quality
optics. Remote access via web or network. Fully-integrated
turn-key system.
Buzz:
Sky & Telescope calls the LX400 “the most electronically
sophisticated mass-market telescope ever made.”
79
.06
OBSERVATORY CLASS. For the pro in all of us.
L X 4 0 0- A C F ™
A dvanced C O M A - F R E E
A. B. G. P.
H. T.
I.
D.
O.
C.
S. e. F. I. L. U.
Q. J. K.
R.
M.
O.
M.
“The LX400-ACF does indeed “Out of the box the scope had the “The scope is a quantum leap above
perform like a Ritchey-Chrétien. most responsive declination guiding conventional Schmidt-Cassegrains.
The difference between the that I have ever experienced with a It approaches the performance
off-axis images (compared to a mass-market telescope.” of telescopes that cost five or
Schmidt-Cassegrain) was six times as much.”
dramatic to say the least.” — Sky & Telescope magazine
— Jason Ware, Astrophotographer
— Sky & Telescope magazine
80
Imagine you’re a seasoned astrophotographer saving up for the fast f-ratio, wide-field, coma-
free, custom telescope of a lifetime. One that can handle the largest CCD chips. One with state-
of-the-art optics and mechanics. One that is praised as “approaching perfection” by industry
critics and astronomers alike. Suddenly you find out your telescope is available for one-fifth
of what you thought—and you won’t have to wait six months for it to be built. What would you
do? You’d buy one.
Sky & Telescope Magazine says the LX400-ACF “fills a significant gap that existed between similar
aperture Schmidt-Cassegrains and custom-made Ritchey-Chrétien reflectors.” Until now, the only
systems comparable to the LX400-ACF were custom-made and had to be pieced together with components
from different vendors. To deliver a comparable research-grade system, fully integrated, out-of-
the-box, would be a grand achievement at half the price. At less than one-third of the price, it’s a
miracle. That explains why the LX400-ACF won a 2005 “Best of What’s New Award” from Popular Science
Magazine.
Sky & Telescope’s glowing review ended with this thought: “Some hobbyists mistakenly believe
that a product review without equal doses of praise and criticism is biased or unbalanced. Truth is,
I can’t find many negative things to say about the LX400-ACF…the LX400-ACF is a winner.”
Pat e n t-P e n di ng ( f /8) A dva nc e d C om a-Fr e e op t ic s . Astrophotographer Jason Ware says “the
LX400-ACF is a huge jump [over the Schmidt-Cassegrain] as far as sharpness of image, flatness of field, and color.” The fast
(f/8) Advanced Coma-Free design produces a large, coma-free field of view from edge-to-edge. The corrector plate reduces
astigmatism inherent in the traditional RC design (see pg. 49).
A.
Legendary Diffraction-limited optics. Only Meade individually figures their Water White glass
corrector lenses and Pyrex® primary and secondary mirrors in our own plant in Mexico for observatory-class light transmission,
temperature stability, smoothness and image correction. Advanced Coma-Free Optics are Meade’s very best. And our optics lead
the industry (see pg. 128). b.
L a s e r-A l ign e d, Fi x e d O v e r s i z e d P r i m a ry M i r ror . Laser aligned to the true optical path, then
bonded in place, the mirror is fixed but literally floats on neoprene rubber seals. This results in zero stress to the glass and no
distortion to the optics. c.
N i n e Fo c u s Po s i t ion P r e s e t s . Customize up to nine perfect focus settings for moving from eyepiece to
eyepiece, camera to camera, or observer to observer. Recall preset positions with the touch of a few buttons. e.
E l e c t ron ic C ol l i m at ion . The very best astrophotographs come from well-collimated (aligned) optics.
The LX400-ACF’s unique collimation process is so easy that you can collimate in just seconds with simple up-down/left-right
buttons on the AutoStar® II controller. F.
Bu i lt-I n A n t i-D e w H e at e r . A unique heating coil is affixed to the outside edge of the corrector lens.
Temperature is adjusted via the AutoStar II controller. Uses a fraction of the energy of aftermarket anti-dew heaters.
Sky & Telescope says it “worked exceptionally well.” G.
Son y ® GPS R e c e i v e r Se n s or . Automatically inputs exact time, date, and geographical location to help quickly
and precisely align your telescope. Gets a satellite fix in seconds despite obstructions like trees or buildings. H.
Au toA l ign ™ . Automatically aligns your scope to the night sky. Sky & Telescope says, “Working with the LX400-ACF
I. was a very pleasant out-of-the-box experience. In a perfect world all products would be like this...”
Sm a rt D r i v e ™ . Provides Permanent Periodic Error Correction (PPEC) on both axes over the course of one or more
J. training periods, thereby minimizing guiding corrections during long-exposure astrophotography.
Smart Mount ™ . Constantly refines pointing accuracy each time an object is centered and updated. Works in equatorial
K. or altazimuth alignment. An indispensable feature for permanent installations.
AutoStar® II controller. AutoStar on steroids. Features “Hot Keys” for quick access to over 180,000 celestial objects.
Operate LX400-ACF features like Electronic Focusing and Collimation, Anti-Dew Heater, Smart Drive and Smart Mount.
L. Download software updates, guided tours, and timely objects like comets and new discoveries free at Meade.com (see pg. 86).
U H TC .™ Our exotic optical coatings optimize light transmission. Image brightness is increased by 15% over standard coatings.
P. It’s like adding up to an extra inch of aperture (depending on scope size). Objects appear dramatically brighter (see pg. 68).
I n t e r n a l O p t ic s a n d M e c h a n ic s . Fork arms are longer and stronger. 10", 12", and 14" telescopes can
reach 90º declination on a wedge, allowing you to reach the horizon. Longer fork arms also allow more back clearance so you
can image all the way to the pole with most cameras. An OTA fan accelerates cool down so your optics will acclimate quicker
Q. to the ambient temperature.
Mu lt i-Port C on t rol Pa n e l s . The first telescope to feature a powered, three port high speed USB 2.0 hub.
Separate control panels are positioned on both the drive base and rear cell of the OTA, so you can plug equipment like the
R. AutoStar® II and the Deep Sky Imager ™ directly into the OTA control panel to avoid cord wrap and tangle.
Se r i e s 5 0 0 0 ™ 2" Ult r a Wi de A ngl e Ey e p i e c e . 24mm eyepiece gives you the ultimate in eyepiece
design. It delivers extremely high-resolution, contrast and sharpness all the way across an astounding 82˚ apparent field of
S. view. Several different types of exotic glass are combined to give you the highest possible level of optical performance.
Au to Sta r Su i t e ™ Sof t wa r e . Easy-to-use planetarium software allows you to see what’s in the sky tonight.
T. Plan observing sessions, print star charts, take astrophotographs or control your telescope from your PC (windows only).
R e mot e C on t rol Ac c e s s . The Enhanced LX400-ACF AutoStar Suite lets you come in from the cold and operate
your telescope. You can set-up, control, and image like the pros from the comfort of your home office or even across country
U. via the web.
82
A
LX400-ACF ™ highlights
A. The remote control observatory. Control
your telescope from the comfort of your home,
office, or even out-of-town with Meade’s
completely integrated AutoStar ® II and
LX400-ACF software systems. Access the
computer that controls your telescope via
network or Web access. Work like the pros,
imaging whenever the weather, your schedule,
and the universe align. With an LX400-
ACF, you have your own remotely controlled
observatory. Just set-up, connect, control,
and image. AutoStar II makes it easy.
On axis
f/8 Schmidt-
A
B f/8 LX400-ACF Cassegrain
LX400-acf
.06
A success story fresh off the drawing board.
On March 26, 2002, Meade engineers set out to design a telescope with the
most sophisticated optics, mechanics and electronics ever manufactured.
If successful, the new scope would make observatory-level performance
accessible to any serious astronomer or astrophotographer who desired it.
84
LX400-ACF
16" 20"
MA X MOUNT
L X400-ACF 16" MA X MOUNT On Tripod: #1608-MA X-01 L X400-ACF 20" MA X MOUNT On Tripod: #2008-MA X-01
16" on MA X w/A Z Pier: #1608-MA X-02 20" on MA X w/A Z Pier: #2008-MA X-02
For a full list of specifications go to www.meade.com. Specifications are subject to change without notice.
LX400-acf
.06
AutoStar II ®
EXHIBIT 7
AutoStar II Database
OBJECTS SOURCE
5,386 Galaxies, nebulas, and star clusters. The complete Index Catalog ( IC ).
7, 8 4 0 Galaxies, nebulas, and star clusters. The complete New General
Catalog ( NGC ).
10 9 Best objects for small telescopes from the Caldwell Catalog.
110 Messier objects. The complete Messier catalog.
26 Earth-orbiting satellites.
9 Planets. All the major ones from Mercury to dwarf planet Pluto.
12 , 9 4 0
12 , 9 3 9
Uppsala Galaxy Catalog.
Morphological Catalog of Galaxies.
Wireless AutoStar II ®
Meade’s oversized
primary mirrors capture
the lost light.
Light that travels millions or even billions of years to get Betelgeuse arcturus
MAKSUTOV-CASSEGR AINS
Oversized Primary Mirror
L IS TED APERTURE 90mm 125mm Corrector Lens
ADVANCED COMA-FREE
8. 25" 8"
L IS TED APERTURE 8" 10" 12" 14" 16"
PRIMARY MIRROR SIZE 8.25" 10.38" 12.38" 14.57" 16.38"
Meade compound scopes are 10% brighter off-axis than competing scopes.
A.
E.
B.
F. H.
C.
D.
G.
“MAX is unquestionably the “Views through the 20" are “The MAX is like a German Tank
finest German Equatorial Mount absolutely breathtaking. The spiral crafted by swiss watchmakers.
I have ever used. It delivered my arms of M51 were extremely bright No matter the payload, it glides
dream of a professional quality and clearly defined. It very easily from target to target with
observatory at home.” equaled my 25" f/5 reflector.” pinpoint accuracy.”
88
Behold Meade’s MAX German Equatorial Mount. A behemoth instrument in a class all its own. In
a single, bold stroke, Meade has given the world a production mount that competes with the most
expensive custom installations. Now any school or university (and many private individuals) can
afford a true professional quality observatory mount.
Even with its massive payload capacity (500 lbs including counterweights), the Max tracks as smoothly
and accurately as if it were carrying a feather. Astronomer John Hoot says, “I can shoot two-minute
exposures without guiding and get pinpoint stars.” The MAX’s multiple attachment points let you
load it up with wide-field astrographs, video indexing cameras, DSLRs, etc. without affecting
tracking accuracy.
Outfit your state-of-the-art MAX Mount ™ with a 16" or 20" LX400-ACF Advanced Coma-Free Optical
Tube Assembly and you have an observing system that rivals custom installations that cost three
to five times more. It’s the first fully integrated system of its kind and, as one astrophotographer
put it, “the Max is a gift to the astronomical community.”
5 0 0 Pou n d Tota l C a pac i t y. The MAX blows away every other production mount on the market. This means
you can add guide scopes, wide-field instruments, spectrographs, heavy cameras and coolers to your mount with confidence. b.
13.625" Dual Drive Gears with 652 Teeth. More teeth means more torque. And because the worm turns
more quickly, periodic error decreases in proportion to the tooth count. MAX has roughly half the periodic error of competing
360-tooth mounts. c.
P e r iodic E r ror A s L ow A s 2 A rc Se c on d s . Periodic error of about 2 arc seconds is better than the
seeing condition on most nights. For serious astrophotographers, snap shooters, supernova hunters, asteroid researchers,
variable star studies and other research projects, the MAX Mount is point-and-shoot. GoTo pointing accuracy with
SmartMount ™ is sub arc minute. d.
I n t e r n a l C a b l i ng. The MAX puts all the controls you need for your OTA and modern cameras up on the saddle
plate to allow a cable-free installation of most instruments. Competing mounts make you get out your fish tape and pull cables
through the RA and DEC axes yourself (or call an electrician). f.
0 - 9 0 º L at i t u de .MAX Mounts can be used anywhere on earth from Pole to Pole. No other maker of heavy-duty
mounts can make this claim. G.
A.
D.
C.
E.
B.
F.
M a s s i v e O p t ic a l Tu b e A s s e m b ly. In recent years, Meade’s 16" LX200-ACF on a fork mount has become the
ubiquitous scope of choice for serious amateurs, colleges, and universities. The new MAX Mount means these same individuals
and institutions can own an Advanced Coma-Free with either 16" or 20" of aperture (a full half-meter!). A search of astronomical
literature indicates the vast majority of good science is produced by telescopes in the half-meter to one-meter class. A.
P e de s ta l A s s e m b ly. MAX’s rock solid pedestal assembly represents the perfect marriage between stability and
adjustability. Standard field adjustments can be made quickly and easily (without tools) with MAX’s ergonomic adjustment
knobs. The pedestal assembly can easily be configured to cover three altitude ranges without disassembly. This makes the MAX
the only mount in its class that can operate anywhere on the planet. b.
R igh t A s c e n s ion Hou s i ng A s s e m b ly. The RA Housing mates to the Pedestal easily by sliding firmly into a
100 square inch dovetail block. When locked into place, this broad footprint assures your mount will operate as a single rigid block
for accurate and repeatable pointing and tracking. The RA Housing contains Meade’s proven AutoStar® II telescope control system
and a massive 13.625" pitch diameter worm gear built to handle gigantic loads. c.
Declination Housing Assembly. The DEC Housing mates to the RA Housing using another huge dovetail block.
When locked in place, the mount is one single rigid structure ready to point your instrument anywhere in the universe with
phenomenal accuracy. The mount can cover the whole sky, tracking more than 6 degrees past the meridian (prime seeing area)
without interference. In addition to quick-change dovetail plates for your primary OTA, generous wing mounts allow you to attach a
variety of secondary instruments without interfering with MAX’s “all sky” design. d.
C ou n t e rw e igh t s . MAX counterweights are beautifully crafted with sure locking, quick release buttons. Add MAX
electronic balancing and you can balance your scope quickly and get back to work. e.
Tr i p od or P i e r A s s e m b ly. The MAX tripod can be transported or permanently installed. Its wide stance will
safely carry MAX’s massive payload in all orientations. But it will still collapse down to a size that’s easy to handle. Like the
MAX, it sets up, knocks down, and adjusts without tools. The MAX pier is exclusively for permanent installations. It too can
handle the MAX’s payload in all orientations and withstand vibration. Pier height must be specified at time of order. f.
O t h e r nota b l e p oi n t i ng a n d t r ac k i ng f e at u r e s .
+ C o mpu te r - a s s i s te d s q u a r i n g of y ou r o p t ic a l a x i s .
+ Photographic polar alignment eliminates the need for drift alignment.
+ No clutches or worm releases means no extra alignment, even if you switch instruments during an observing run.
Advanced Pointing EXHIBIT 9
and Tracking
OBSERVATORY-LEVEL PRECISION.
Smart Drive.™ Permanent Periodic Error Correction.
Meade’s SmartDrive technology allows Permanent
Periodic Error Correction (PPEC) on both axes that offers
an observatory standard of precision of 5 arc seconds or
less. Because no worm gear is perfect, no matter how
precisely it is manufactured, small inconsistencies will
always occur in the drive system of any telescope. Meade’s
Smart Drive allows you to train your telescope’s software
to automatically compensate for these tiny periodic errors
in the worm/gear system. This will bring your telescope’s
tracking accuracy up to a level consistent with the
world’s top observatories. The programming is stored
forever, independent of any power source, yet may be
erased, updated or averaged with future programming if
you choose.
High-Precision Pointing (HPP). Finding objects too
“Meade telescopes are
faint to see. designed for everyone from
This feature is most helpful to astrophotographers the casual visual observer
to the most demanding
interested in imaging objects too faint to be confirmed
scientific researcher, with
with the naked eye. Or those who want to place an item the dedicated astropho-
dead center on a very small CCD chip. When you turn tographer in the middle.
No comparably priced scope
this feature on and ask the scope to slew to an object, the
will point or track better.”
scope will first slew to a star right next to the object and
ask you to center that star perfectly. The star is likely – John Hoot, San Clemente, CA
to be perfectly centered already (that’s how accurate
Meade telescopes are). But once you have confirmed the star’s precise location, the scope will slew
to the nearby deep sky object and place it exactly in the center of your field of view. For normal
observing, this level of precision isn’t necessary (a Meade scope will center objects anyway). But
HPP gives you the confidence to kick off a two-hour long imaging sequence without even visually
confirming a faint object’s existence!
Smart Mount .™ Added accuracy for permanent installations.
By constantly refining pointing accuracy every time an object is centered and updated, Smart
Mount helps targets fall in the center of the field of view or the CCD chip every time. Smart
Mount is mostly a tool for people who do high-volume automated astronomy (such as supernova
searches). Say, for example, you want your telescope to follow an imaging script and shoot pictures
of various galaxies throughout the night unattended; Smart Mount ensures every galaxy will be
dead center.
92
EXHIBIT 10 Electronic Focus & Collimation
re-focus for the rest of the night. I’ll move all over the Precise focus? 5
6
7
Easy collimation? 9 preset focus
sky and not have to re-focus.” Sky & Telescope says,
8
9
93
94
“ I n sharing the joys
of astronomy I’ ve
learned to expect
oohs, aahs, and
even more colorful
language . ”
There are a lot of things that really move you The greatest joy I’ve had was probably discov-
in astronomy. More often than not, it’s giving people ering my first supernova. Because at that moment,
their first chance to look through a telescope. it hits you that you’re going down in history with
I teach astrophotography at our Bed and Breakfast. your name on an object. Since then, I’ve discovered
So I get to see the look on people’s faces when they 16 more. That opens the door to just about any
take their first astrophotograph. They absolutely observatory in the world. They know who I am from
shake with excitement. You get people who will all these discoveries and welcome me with open arms.
write you a letter and say, “you’ve changed my life.” So I’m fulfilling my dream of contributing to science
One woman cried when she saw her photo of the in a meaningful way.
Andromeda Galaxy. But my first love is still teaching. We just can’t
But even better things happen when I let people do enough. I’ve always felt that someday many years
look through the eyepiece. One very young child, from now, maybe some Senator will sign the check
couldn’t have been more than six or seven, came to because Jack Newton showed him Saturn when he
our Observatory B&B with his parents. They were was a little boy. That would be payoff. Big time.
visiting from the U.K. He was up on the stepladder We need that next generation of space telescopes
with Saturn in view. When he saw the rings, he up there.
hauled off and squealed out a swear word. It wasn’t Sometimes I wish I could have a few minutes at
a very bad one. But it shocked the parents so that he the eyepiece with every person in the world. Because
gulped when he saw their reaction. The poor kid was that’s what astronomy really comes down to: People
just so excited. It does your heart wonders. and pure joy.
Jack has shot thousands of images with his two Meade 16" LX200s and is cur
rrently expanding his horizons with a Meade 14" LX400-ACF.
96
™
LX400-acf
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“THE FIRST TIME I SAW A GALAXY
(that wasn’t a picture in National Geographic)
I GOT A LUMP IN MY THROAT.”
Of course, then my wife looked in the telescope and said, “That’s pretty cool. How long are we
going to be out here?” That’s typical for most people. I’m drawn to astronomy for the appreciation of
what you’re looking at: A galaxy with a hundred billion stars, forty million light years away. But if
you’re drawn to it for the visual beauty, astrophotography is your key to the hobby.
The total automation of the LX400-ACF makes astrophotography accessible to millions of regular
people like me. I mean, you can do these 6-hour long exposures and still have a life. I’ll kick off a
sequence and go do something else. The scope’s in my backyard working away, and I’m off playing in
a hockey game. Or some nights I go to bed. I wake up and have a whole series of images to process the
next day. Sometimes I check up on my scope’s progress remotely by doing a VNC session on my cell
phone. It’s just phenomenal what amateurs are doing these days. I have these friends who are always
saying , “Someday, I’m going to own a telescope.” Well there’s never been a better time.
— jason ware , astrophotographer opposite page / jason ware / m31 - andromeda galaxy / Meade 12" Schmidt Camera
ED APO Refractors
have produced some
of the most beautiful
images of the heavens
ever taken from Earth.
Mindset:
I enjoy observing the moon and planets in exquisite
detail. I want to take gorgeous wide-field, high-contrast
astrophotographs.
Mantra:
Only the best.
Priorities:
It’s all about the view.
Goals:
Observe and take wide-field astrophotographs of objects like
the moon, planets, double stars, nebulas, galaxies and clusters
with incredible color, contrast and detail.
100
Performance:
Excellent for wide-field deep sky astrophotography and visual
observation of the moon, planets, double stars and clusters.
Optical Design:
Apochromatic Refractor (p.45)
Strengths:
Fast focal ratio. Lightweight.
Portable. Crisp. Clear. High contrast.
Buzz:
Avid astronomer John Hoot said the Meade Series 5000 ED APO
“kicked the tail of my old semi-APO that cost twice as much.”
101
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Contrast. Detail. Clarity. Have it all.
S eries 5 0 0 0 ™ E D A P O
D.
C.
G.
A. B.
E.
F.
H.
I.
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For crisp wide-field observing and imaging, few optical designs match the performance of a true
triple-element apochromatic refractor. This is especially true in astrophotography. Thanks to
a two-year design process and a triple objective lens made from the highest quality ED (extra-
low dispersion) glass, Meade Series 5000 ™ ED APO Triplets compete head-to-head with the world’s
premium APOs at a fraction of the cost.
Expert observers will be delighted by the virtual absence of color fringing around objects and
the scope’s textbook-perfect pinpoint star images. Even beginners will notice the extra high
contrast and breathtaking resolution of a Series 5000 ED APO. Each scope is available as a stand-
alone OTA in two models: Standard or deluxe. The deluxe model includes our new Series 5000 2"
enhanced diagonal with a 99% reflectivity mirror and an aluminium hard carrying case.
A Series 5000 ED APO is the ideal companion for your larger Schmidt-Cassegrain, Ritchey-
Chrétien, or Newtonian scope. When piggybacked, a Series 5000 ED APO is the perfect guide scope
that doubles as an ideal wide-field photography scope when guided by the primary instrument. It
also makes an ideal lightweight and portable scope for flawless field observing.
We anticipate that over the next several years these scopes will produce some the world’s best
wide-field astrophotographs.
P r e m i u m ED Gl a s s . For unsurpassed color correction, brightness, clarity. Expensive FCD1 ED Glass. This
Extra-low Dispersion (ED) glass causes all three primary spectral colors to meet at the same focal point for textbook-
perfect views. Virtually eliminates chromatic aberration. A.
Tru e ED A p o c h rom at ic Tr i p l e t. A true triplet optical design guarantees the textbook color correction
you should expect from a premium APO. b.
Fa s t fo c a l R at io. At f/6 (80mm) and f 7.5 (127mm), the focal ratio of these scopes is tailor-made for
wide-field astrophotography. c.
A i r- Spac e d O bj e c t i v e Le n s . The precision air-spaced triple element ED objective lens focuses red, green,
and blue wave lengths to the same exact focal point. d.
Fu l ly-Mu lt ic oat e d Le n s e s . Meade broadband multicoated lenses ensure maximum light transmission. e.
Mounting Bracket. Allows nearly universal mounting on all Meade and non-Meade German equatorial Mounts.
i.
Need a mount? See LXD75 German Equatorial Mount, pg. 32-35.
“ O v e r t h e y e a r s I h a v e done quite a bit of astrophotography of all types and cons ider
t h e n e w S e r i es 5 0 0 0 A P O Refractor one of the f inest instruments of its type for imaging.
5000 ed apo
.07
mark sibole / m100 / meade 80mm ed apo mark sibole / ngc 6960 / meade 80mm ed apo
105
“ Th e p e o p l e o f M o n t s e r r a t h a d a l r e a d y s e e n
hurricanes, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
S o I showed them J u piter . ”
—Tippy D’Auria
In 1997, one of seven active volcanoes on Boy Scouts. Brownies. Moms and Dads. S Maybe
the 7x12-mile island of Montserrat suffered a it was the pull of the cosmos. Maybe there was
catastrophic eruption. Two thirds of the island’s just nowhere else to go. But there was a line
20,000 inhabitants fled. The capital city of in front of that little Meade ETX telescope for
Plymouth was abandoned. You could walk out of five nights straight. Nearly 2500 men, women,
a second story window onto volcanic ash. S As a and mostly children, waited over an hour to
volcanologist and amateur astronomer, I went look at planets they had read about in books
with some friends to Montserrat in the spring but had yet to experience. S Of all the sights in
of 2001 to study the impact of the full moon on astronomy, none is grander than the look on
volcanic activity. S Knowing we were headed to a child’s face when they first see the rings of
a place where there had never been a telescope Saturn. And here’s a little trick of the trade:
before, I took one along just for fun. At first, it Never tell a child you’re going to show them
was a mistake. The telescope got me held up in Saturn. Instead , let them look in the telescope
customs because the agent was afraid I would and say, “ what do you see?” You can thank me
tr y to sell it. I got through by giving the agent later. S Since my first look at Saturn’s rings,
all of my food money as collateral. S I could I have recorded video of mysterious flashes
no longer eat. But I could stargaze. Such were on Mars, photographed dozens of comets and
the humble beginnings of the first star party in meteor showers, and had an asteroid named
Montserrat history. S The island’s only radio in my honor (11378 D’Auria). But the real
station (to which everyone listens for volcanic joy of astronomy is still sharing the wonder
activity reports) ran announcements that some with others. While the ef fect is somewhat less
Americans were up on Jack Boy Hill with a dramatic at home than it was on Jack Boy Hill,
telescope. Half the island turned out. Literally. my telescope never fails to draw a crowd .
106
107
.08
E C ONOMI S T
A and DS -2000
™
S E R IE S
Mindset:
I don’t have a lot of money, but I still want to see the
rings of Saturn, explore the lunar surface, stars and clusters,
and discover what stargazing is all about.
Mantra:
Curiosity makes the world go round.
Priorities:
Price. A positive stargazing experience. A sturdy mount.
Quality optics.
Goals:
Stay on budget.
Find a quality telescope I can learn and grow with.
108
Performance:
Amazingly crisp views of moon, planets, bright clusters
and nebulas.
Design:
Refractor, Reflector.
Strength:
Mount and optics designed with passion by Meade engineers
in Irvine, CA. Many features from higher priced Meade
scopes find their way into the A and DS-2000 series.
Buzz:
A handful of dedicated amateurs use Meade’s DS-2000 series
scopes with our Lunar Planetary and Deep Sky imagers
to do astrophotography with impressive results.
.01 .02
RECRUIT ENTHUSIAST
109
Meade 70AZ-AR #04043
Newtonian Reflector
Altazimuth mount
f/8.8 focal ratio (1000mm)
A AND DS -2000
What can you see? Most astronomers trace their love of the night sky to a first look at Saturn through a
telescope just like the ones in this section. Any entry-level scope will let you see craters on the Moon, the
rings of Saturn, the cloud belts of Jupiter and its moons, plus countless star clusters, double stars, nebulas and
more. Remember, low power is best, and the larger the aperture (scope diameter), the brighter those deep sky
treasures will appear. The astrophotographs in this catalog do not represent actual views through a telescope.
For an explanation, see pg. 57
Choosing your scope. For further information on selecting your scope, see the following sections: Optical
Systems, pgs. 45-49; AutoStar®, pg. 13; AutoAlign™ with SmartFinder™, pg. 15, and Aperture, pg. 57.
edward roach / saturn / lx90
mark sibole / moon / etx-90
chuck reese / mars / lx200
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Manual
telescopes. Basic can be beautiful.
A-ser i e s scopes a r e ou r most basic . Th ese m a n ua l scope s le t you lea r n t h e n igh t sk y f rom
sta r ch a rts a n d t h e i nclu ded DV D sof t wa r e . M a n y old-school hobby ists st i ll f eel t h is
m e t hod of “sta r-hoppi ng” is t h e be st way to lea r n ast ronomy.
DS-2000 series scopes are fully computer-guided GoTo scopes. They include our AutoStar ®
controller (#494) with its database of over 1400 objects. If you want an affordable telescope
that will give you a guided tour of the night sky, the DS-2000 series is a great place to start.
+ Series 4000 Super Plössl 1.25" Eyepieces: (26mm and 9.7mm) Enjoy low
and high power viewing with crisp, wide fields of view.
.08
DS-2114ATS-LNT 114mm Reflector
Like the DS-2080, the DS-2114 knows the night sky out of the box. It can
take you on a guided tour of the universe at the push of a button. But
with a full 4.5" of aperture, you’ll see more surface detail on planets, more
cloud structure in nebulas, more stars in clusters, and more brightness
everywhere you look. Not for land viewing.
Deluxe AutoStar #494
1,400 object database
+ 114mm (4.5") Aperture: Amazing aperture offers brighter views of planets,
clusters, nebulas and galaxies.
+ Sturdy Fork Mount: Lightweight, solid aluminum mount
for a stable view.
+ #494 AutoStar® Controller: Automatically locates over 1400 objects and points 114 m m
the telescope toward them for you at the push of a button. DS-2114
Ref lector
+ Series 4000™ Super Plössl 1.25" Eyepieces: (25mm and 9mm) Enjoy low
and high power viewing with crisp, wide fields of view.
+ Altazimuth Set-up: Easy-to-use mount moves up/down, left/right.
+ SmartFinder™/Red Dot Viewfinder™: Makes stars and other objects 130mm
easy to find. Electronic level sensor, north sensor, and precision DS-2130
internal clock help get your scope aligned with the heavens quickly. Ref lector
+ AutoStar Suite™ DVD: Amazing planetarium software and instructional
video will help you learn about the night sky and how to use your telescope.
Print out star charts. Plan observing sessions. Displays over 10,000 night sky
objects. Operates on any Windows®-based PC.
astrophotography: jack newton / m81 - bodes glaxy & m82 - cigar galaxy / lx400
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Deep-Sky Imaging for everyone is here. Dive in.
DSI
john paul longchamp
DSI II
High Sensitivity Sony® EXview HAD ™ CCD color sensor
752x582 (437,664) pixels
16-bit A/D conversion
1/10,000 sec. to 1-hour exposures
USB 2.0 (cable included)
mark sibole / ngc 2264
- cone nebula / dsi ii
D S I II P r o ( Monoc hr ome)
Same as above except with High Sensitivity Sony®
EXview HAD ™ CCD monochrome sensor
(also available with CCD color filter set)
IMAGERS
“The DSI system is a low-cost,
rewarding gateway to deep-sky astrophotography.”
b. Automatic stacking makes imaging a joy. One of the most amazing aspects of
AutoStar Suite is the ability to automatically stack multiple good images and throw
out bad ones. This process has long been used to overcome atmospheric turbulence,
gusts of wind, poor alignment and other issues that affect image clarity. But it has
never been this automated. Or this easy.
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The Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI).
Works miracles on the moon, planets and even the Sun.
Imagine watching Saturn, Mars, Jupiter or the moon download onto your computer screen in incredible
detail. That’s the experience thousands of amateurs have enjoyed, thanks to the LPI, Meade’s sophisticated
take on the web cam. More than one user commented, “It was worth the price of the camera just to get the
power of the software alone.”
Installing the LPI is as easy as installing an eyepiece. With similar magnification to a 6mm eyepiece, the LPI
lets you capture high magnification images of the moon, planets, and brighter deep sky objects in breathtaking
detail. Or you can photograph the sun (with proper filters). It also works well with a Barlow lens for even
closer views. It’s a fun and exciting introduction to astrophotography that will keep you busy for years.
LPI
peter o’brien / m42 - great orion nebula / dsi pro peter o’brien / m13 - hercules cluster / dsi
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Deep Sky Imager (DSI). Capture the universe in stunning detail.
“I’m sold! I was able to capture incredible images my first night out. The DSI
has reignited my passion for astronomy.” — P et er O’Br i e n
Sky and Telescope says, “I came away from my DSI experience wondering why anyone with a telescope and
a computer wouldn’t want to own one of these cameras. [They are] one of the best values in astronomical
imaging available today.” If you’ve always wanted to take detailed color photos of faint nebulas, galaxies, and
star clusters but found the astrophotography learning curve a little too steep, Meade’s DSI is for you.
Consider the story (now legendary in Meade circles) of Matt Taylor, who decided to try out his DSI on
M51, set the exposure time to 30 seconds, fell asleep, and woke up an hour later to find a beautiful image of
the Whirlpool Galaxy on his computer screen. While Matt’s “snooze” approach is not recommended, many
amateurs echo the sentiments of Hilary Jones who says, “on my first night out, I found I could photograph
several deep sky targets with very little effort.”
If you’re comparing the DSI to Johnny-come-lately knock-offs, consider it’s unique design advantages. These
include convection cooling and other proprietary noise reduction techniques (which combine to allow longer
exposures with less noise and more data). Meade AutoStar Suite is also the easiest and most intuitive imaging
software on the market. Finally, zero compression means no loss of information in your raw images.
First time user, George Lilley says, I’ll never forget watching the Ring Nebula (M57) appear on my screen.
The DSI helps first-timers like me take images that show detail no eyepiece could ever deliver. Chuck Reese
adds, “After a few weeks with the DSI, I know two things: I love CCD astrophotography, and it will be years
before the DSI becomes the limiting factor in my ability to create the caliber of images I want.”
DSI
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DSI II and DSI Pro II. Giving high cost imagers a run for their money.
“The larger chip, greater sensitivity, and lower noise make the DSI Pro II
a definite contender with “The Big Boys.” — St e v e H a m i lton
The user-friendly astrophotography revolution continues with the larger, more sensitive, higher resolution
DSI II and DSI Pro II. A number of astrophotographers have written to tell us that the DSI II (or DSI Pro II)
has turned their expensive cooled camera into a primary auto-guider. Mark Sibole of Fife Lake, MI, says, “I
owned a more expensive cooled imager in the past and didn’t get images like I get with the DSI II. I’ve since
sold that expensive camera because I wasn’t using it any more.”
The DSI II (color) and DSI Pro II (monochrome/color filter) cameras combine ease-of-use with a larger
chip, greater sensitivity, higher resolution and dramatically lower thermal noise. Meade engineers invented a
remarkable new way to reduce noise without a cooler. This means you can take exposures for hours at a time.
And new thermal monitoring sensors match dark frames to ambient temperatures so it’s nearly impossible to
take an uncalibrated picture.
The camera has a new zoom feature for easier focusing and the squared pixels of the new larger chip make
processing simpler and images more beautiful than ever. The DSI II is the world’s first un-cooled camera with
low thermal noise. And that’s as cool as it gets.
DSI II user Chuck Reese says, “I did not have to take dark frames because the software can match the operating
temperature of the chip to the perfect dark frames taken from previous sessions. My hat is off to Meade. I
was expecting an incremental step forward but the DSI II is more like a quantum leap!” Steve Hamilton
agrees, “The DSI-Pro II shows Meade’s dedication to providing beginner, intermediate, and even advanced
astrophotographers with constantly improving platforms and processes—along with a professional level of
quality unheard of at this price.”
The pictures and testimonials speak for themselves. If you want to own the absolute best of the user-friendly
Meade imager family, get a DSI II or DSI Pro II.
This is not new to Meade. Since the company started participate in raffles for stargazing equipment (USA only),
some 30 years ago, its driving purpose has been to grow and much more. Astrophotography contests, star parties,
the hobby. Our founder, John C. Diebel, even won the community events, and the 4M Community website help
prestigious Bower award from the Franklin Institute in members achieve the four pillars of 4M—to explore, discover,
1998 for “helping ordinary people experience the discipline, learn and share the astronomy experience with others.
wonder and excitement of scientific inquiry.” Past Franklin
The 4M Community is inclusive, not exclusive. Our
Institute Award recipients include Alexander Graham Bell,
members can own any brand of telescope or no telescope
Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking.
at all. Our partner organizations include the Astronomical
20,000 members and growing, the Meade 4M Community took League, Popular Science, StarDate, the International Dark
off like the Big Bang in 2005 and is already beginning to fulfill Sky Association, Sky & Telescope, Astronomy, and more.
its mission by supporting, encouraging, and strengthening If there is a group of people anywhere on the planet that
the astronomical community like never before. encourages others to discover the wonders of the universe,
the 4M Community supports it wholeheartedly.
The 4M Community board of advisors includes some of the
most important names in astronomy including all-stars like If you are a seasoned astronomer, the 4M Community is
David Levy, Jack Newton, Tippy D’Auria, Andre Bormanis, your home base for keeping in touch with friends, sharing
and Terry Mann, among others. These luminaries provide new discoveries, and mentoring others. If you are new to
astronomy tips, give lectures, advise the community, and the hobby, the fastest way to dive into astronomy with
participate in the 4M online radio program, Meade Radio. both feet is to join both your local astronomy club and the
4M Community members get to access our online radio 4M Community.
programs, shop the online 4M store with select discounts,
To learn more about the 4M C ommunity or sign up to become a member , visit www. meade 4m .com .
124
DAVID & WENDee LEV Y are hosts of the Meade Radio program, “Ask David.”
Topics have included “How To Search For Comets.” Considering David’s 21 comet discoveries,
it’s worth a listen. Meade Radio programs have also featured “Astrophotography Tips” with
astrophotography guru Jack Newton, and a captivating inter view with UNESCO’s Space Education
126
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Meade 4M COMMUNITY
Meade Optics. The quest for a perfect view.
A perfect view of the heavens will always be affected by things beyond our control: Atmospheric turbulence. Light
pollution. Clouds. But for over 30 years, it’s been our passion to control every aspect of the astronomy experience
that science, research, and precise optical manufacturing methods allow. Because the exploration we love to do at
night is made possible by the job we love to do each day.
Precision diamond milling. Electronic-beam vacuum coating. Interferometers. Foucault and Ronchi tests.
Complex optical coating formulas. These represent just a small part of the pains we go through each day to make
sure that when you reach the unreachable star, it will be a perfect pinpoint of light. There is not a commercial
telescope company on earth who has invested more money in equipment, brainpower, and optical innovation
than Meade. Comet discoverer David Levy puts it this way, “Meade has a generation of experience making optics
for telescopes and they’ve really got it right. Optically, even the smallest ETX is well worth double its price.”
This is our mission. To discover new ways to design and manufacture serious telescopes in high enough volume
to allow everyone an observatory-quality experience from their own backyard. It’s a dream that’s coming true.
After decades of industry-leading innovations, the Advanced Coma-Free design is our grandest achievement yet.
Astrophotographer Jack Newton says, “The genius of Meade’s engineering team is reflected in the new Advanced
Coma-Free design. It is just dramatically better than any Schmidt-Cassegrain you can buy. Meade has raised the
bar on the whole optics question. Everybody else will be scrambling to catch up.”
Dr. P. Clay Sherrod of the Arkansas Sky Observatories puts it this way, “Meade Schmidt-Cassegrain optics were
the best consumer optics made with that design. But the Advanced Coma-Free series are a real step up. The
optics on my 16" are absolutely the best I have ever tested in a production telescope… Bar none.”
Add to these optical triumphs our recent innovations in CCD imaging (our user-friendly family of DSI imagers
has created an astrophotography revolution) and it’s easy to see why the growth of Meade and the growth of
amateur astronomy go hand-in-hand.
It wouldn’t be wise for us to give away all of our research and manufacturing secrets (only six employees are
authorized to enter our Advanced Coma-Free lab). But we can tell you that while other manufacturers are
doing less and less to move astronomy forward, we will continue to do more and more. After all, astronomy is
our passion.
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Series 5000 Eyepieces. The best view of the heavens on earth.
™
Series 5000 5-Element Plössls have the widest apparent field of view (60º)
of any Plössl on the market. The Super Wide Angle series ups the ante with
an amazing-for-the-money 68º apparent field of view. Finally, our top-of-
the-line Ultra Wide Angle eyepieces deliver an astounding 82˚ apparent field
of view. For uncompromising views that make any telescope better, order a
set today. You have to see the universe through one to believe it.
C o m p l e t e K i t s w i t h a l u m i n u m c a s e
130
“The Ultra Wide Angle Series 5000 is the most incredible eyepiece I’ve ever tested.
Perfectly flat to the edges. Outstanding light transmission. Absolutely breathtaking.”
M e a d e S e r i e s 5 0 0 0 e y e p i e c e s .
™
4.7 1.25" 7
6.7 1.25" 7
U lt r a W i d e A n g l e
8.8 1.25" 7
[ 8 2 °] 14 1.25" 7
16 1.25" 6
5.5 1.25" 6
9 1.25" 5
Plössl
14 1.25" 5
[ 6 0 °] 20 1.25" 5
field of view 26 1.25" 5
32 2" 5
2x 1.25" 4
Te l e Xt e n d e r s
3x 1.25" 4
[2x-5x] 5x 1.25" 4
m a g n i f i c at i o n 2x 2.0" 4
™
2" Enhanced Boost eyepiece performance with the new 2" Series 5000
Diagonal enhanced diagonal. This thermally stable, interferometer-
Series 4000 QX Wide Angle™ eyepieces are one of the few eyepieces sold today that offer a 70º apparent field of view
combined with ultra sharp resolution and contrast. Series 4000 Super Plössls represent the best eyepiece value in
the market. Period. The Series 4000 zoom lens offers a complete focal length range from 8mm to 24mm (in a single
eyepiece) without sacrificing resolution compared to fixed focal length oculars.
Series 4000 highlights include: Premium grade optical glass, multi-layer coatings, blackened lens edges, parfocal
(except 40mm and 56mm Super Plössls), comfortable eye relief, fold-down rubber eyeguards.
M e a d e S e r i e s 4 0 0 0 e y e p i e c e s .
™
15 1.25" 5
20 1.25" 5
QX Wide Angle
26 2.0" 5
[ 7 0 °] 30 2.0" 5
field of view
36 2.0" 5
6.4 1.25" 4
9.7 1.25" 4
12.4 1.25" 4
Super Plössl
15 1.25" 4
[ 5 2 °] 20 1.25" 4
field of view 26 1.25" 4
32 1.25" 4
40 1.25" 4
56 2.0" 4
# 1 4 0 A p o c h ro m at i c
Barlow Lens
2 x M a g n i f i c at i o n
MAGNFICATION BARREL SIZE # OF ELEMENTS
2X 1.25" 3
Z o o m Ey e p i e c e
4 0 ˚ f i e l d o f v i e w ( 5 0˚ @ 8 0 m m / 4 0 ˚ @ 2 4 m m )
8mm-24mm 1.25" 7
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M e a d e S e r i e s 4 0 0 0 Ey e p i e c e
a n d F i lt e r S e t
Th e se spe ci a lt y e y epi e ce s a r e v ery usef u l for ast rophotogr a ph ers w ho n eed to l ock on to
gu i de sta r s a n d t h e n f r a m e obj e cts on t h e CCD ch i p. Or for observ ers m a k i ng ast ronom ic a l
m e a su r em e n ts. Th ei r e tch ed r e t icle pat t er ns a r e i n t er n a lly r ed i llu m i n at ed to sta n d ou t
aga i nst a da r k sk y.
I l l u m i n at e d 9 m m S e r i e s 4 0 0 0 P l ö s s l .
The world’s finest commercially available illuminated reticle. We outfitted
a quality 4-element, fully-coated Plössl with a fully illuminated double- 9mm
crossline and two concentric circles plus x-y positioning controls that
make locking onto a guide star noticeably easier. Variable brightness.
Available w/wire or wireless.
I l l u m i n at e d 1 2 m m M o d i f i e d A c h r o m at i c .
An excellent lower cost alternative to the 9mm illuminated reticle.
12mm
I l l u m i n at e d 1 2 m m A s t r o m e t r i c E y e p i e c e .
A high precision eyepiece with four different illuminated scales for
making astronomical measurements. Measure double star separations and
12mm
position angles, planetary diameters, lunar crater diameters, and more.
Astrometric
Also includes a double-crossline scale for guiding during astrophotography.
™
I l l u m i n at e d 2 5 m m P l ö s s l C C D F r a m i n g O c u l a r .
Helps you compose astronomical images to fit the dimensions of Meade’s
Deep Sky Imager CCD chips. Includes illuminated “frames” for DSI and 25mm CCD
DSI II CCD chip sizes. A lockable spacer allows eyepiece to be parfocal
with your imager. Variable brightness. Wireless only.
Series 4000 FILTERS. Awe-inspiring contrast and detail.
™
Meade Series 4000 filters offer 26mm of clear aperture and are
manufactured from the purest optical glass, dyed-in-the-mass (not
“color coated”). There are no finer filters available for telescopic
applications. They thread into the barrels of virtually any brand of
1.25" eyepiece as well as the 1.25" Meade Basic Camera adapter. They
may also be stacked to achieve selective filtration of the visual color
spectrum.
Each Series 4000 filter is packed in a foam-fitted plastic case for safe long-
term storage. The color filters come in four economically priced sets.
rodney berryman / jupiter
#12 Yellow (74% transmission): #11 Yellow-Green (78% transmission): #8 Light Yellow (83% transmission):
Adds contrast to blues and enhances reds and Contrasts with red and blue features on Popular for enhancing lunar features in
yellows on Jupiter and Saturn, increases contrast Jupiter, and Saturn. Darkens the maria telescopes 8" and under. Also for observing
on Mars and the moon (in scopes 6" plus). on Mars. Clarifies the Cassini division in red and orange features of Jupiter, Uranus
#23A Light Red (25% transmission): Saturn’s rings. and Neptune.
Enhances detail in polar regions of Jupiter, #25A Red (14% transmission): Dark red #21 Orange (46% transmission): Blocks
Saturn and Mars (in scopes 6" plus). Also blocks blue and blue-green for sharp contrast blue-green wave lengths to enhance detail
increases contrast between Mercury and in Jupiter’s cloud belts. Helps define polar caps in polar regions of Jupiter and Saturn. Also
evening sky. and maria on Mars. For telescopes 8" plus. sharpens edge detail of maria on Mars.
#58 Green (24% transmission): #47 Violet (3% transmission): #38A Dark Blue (17% transmission):
On telescopes 8" plus, this green increases Strongly rejects red, yellow and green. For Popular for study of Jupiter. Strongly rejects
belt structure on Jupiter and Saturn’s surface study of Martian polar caps, the atmosphere orange and red for greater cloud belt and Red
and in Saturn’s rings. Also enhances Mars’ of Venus, Saturn’s rings. For telescopes 8" plus. Spot contrast. Also for Mars, Saturn and Venus.
ice caps. #82A Light Blue (73% transmission): #56 Light Green (53% transmission):
#80A Blue (30% transmission): A Useful on the moon, Mars, Jupiter, and Excellent for Mars’ polar ice caps and
popular filter for enhancing spiral features in Saturn. Light blue adds contrast without yellow-tinted dust storms. Also for increasing
Jupiter’s cloud belt (including the Red Spot), robbing image brightness. A valuable filter red and blue features on Jupiter and lunar
and adding contrast to Saturn and the moon. for stacking. contrast.
S e r i e s 4 0 0 0 L u n a r F i lt e r a n d Va r i a b l e
P o l a r i z i n g F i lt e r ( a v a i l a b l e s e p a r a t e l y ) :
# 3 2 0 0 L u n a r P l a n e ta ry F i lt e r S e t
An economical alternative to Series 4000 filters, this set includes widely-
used red, yellow, blue and neutral density-filters that adapt to most viewing
conditions. Use them to increase planetary contrast and resolution and reduce
glare of the full moon. They fit into the barrels of any Meade 1.25" eyepiece.
135
K
C G
H O
B
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Accessory Kits. Save money on the essentials.
E T X C e l e st i a l O b s e rv e r’ s K i t
I Series 4000 9.7mm Super Plössl eyepiece
O Series 4000 15mm Super Plössl eyepiece
E 2x Short-Focus Barlow Lens
E T X A m at e u r A s t r o n o m e r ’ s K i t
I Series 4000 9.7mm Super Plössl eyepiece
O Series 4000 15mm Super Plössl eyepiece
P Series 4000 32mm Super Plössl eyepiece
E 2x Short-Focus Barlow Lens
M 3200 Lunar Planetary 4 -color filter set
F AC Adapter
E T X D e lu x e O b s e rv e r’ s K i t
I Series 4000 9.7mm Super Plössl eyepiece
Q Series 4000 15mm QX Wide Angle eyepiece
P Series 4000 32mm Super Plössl eyepiece
E 2x Short-Focus Barlow Lens
J Series 4000 Filter Set #1
C Series 4000 Moon Filter ND96
H 45 degree Erecting Prism
A Vibration Isolation Pads
F AC Adapter
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Imaging Accessories. The perfect shot is in the details.
Shoot i ng a rt-ga llery i m age s of t h e h eav e ns m ay sta rt w i t h t h e r igh t t ele scope , mou n t, a n d c a m er a ,
bu t i t e n ds w i t h acce ssor i e s li k e t h e se . Wh e t h er you a r e a season ed sta r-shoot er, a ser ious r e se a rch er,
or j ust a be gi n n er, M ea de h as e v ery t h i ng you n eed to ca pt u r e t h e n igh t sk y for a rt or sci e nce .
A Deep Sky Imager Fan. It’s cool. Enhances the air- I T-Mounts. Canon and Nikon. T-Ring Mounts allow
cooled properties of any DSI camera. Keeps your camera up to 9º you to attach your SLR or DSLR camera to your telescope.
Fahrenheit cooler than without a fan. Powered by 8 user-supplied Available for Canon, Canon EOS, and Nikon cameras.
AA batteries or with #541 AC power supply (p. 141).
J Basic Camera Adapter. Your telescope. Your camera.
B Deep Sky Imager Pro II RGB Filter Set. For photographing the moon, planets and stars through your
The colorizer. Color filter set for monochrome DSI Pro II. telescope using 1.25" eyepieces. Accepts an eyepiece that will
Includes Red, Green, and Blue interference filters plus an IR project an enlarged image onto the camera film plane or CCD
blocking filter. Designed specifically for DSI imagers, these filters chip. Each camera requires a separate T-mount.
provide ideal wave length transmissions for true color images with
minimum exposure times. 1.25" Parfocal. K Variable Projection Camera Adapter. With
or without an eyepiece. This camera adapter permits a
C Equatorial Wedges. A long exposure necessity. continuous range of projection magnifications. Two separable
An Equatorial Wedge is for exposures longer than about 5 minutes units allow prime focus or eyepiece-projection photography.
D
(under 5 minutes, a wedge is not necessary). A wedge permits Requires a camera-specific T-Mount. 1.25"
precise polar alignment of your telescope in equatorial mode
(compared to Alt/Az mode). This eliminates field rotation L ETX PE T-Adapter. #64T Shoot through your ETX
in long-exposure photographs by allowing you to align the PE. Prime focus camera adapter converts your ETX PE into a
telescope’s axis of rotation with the Earth’s axis of rotation. telephoto lens. Threads onto the rear cell of the ETX PE 90 and
Die cast aluminum wedges include fine adjusters, no-tool knobs, 125. Requires camera-specific T-Mount.
and a compass for faster aligning on the pole. Choose the appropriate
8" EQ Wedge or our extra heavy duty Ultra-Wedge. M ETX-80 T-Adapter. #64ST Shoot through your ETX
+ 8" LX90ACF Equatorial Wedge with adapter plate (not shown) 80. Prime focus camera adapter converts your ETX into a tele-
photo lens. Threads onto the rear cell of the ETX 80. Requires
+ 8" LX200-ACF Equatorial Wedge
camera-specific T-Mount.
+ Ultra-Wedge (Ultra-stable wedge for all LX
models 8"-14") N ETX PE Back Cell Adapter. Accepts Schmidt
accessories. The Back Cell Adapter allows your ETX to accept
E Field De-Rotator. The equatorial wedge alternative. Schmidt-Cassegrain accessories like focal reducers, flip-mirrors,
If you want to do long exposures (over 5 minutes) in Alt/Az and off-axis guiders. Turns your ETX into a world-class
mode without a wedge, you can correct for field rotation (which astrophotography instrument.
results from the scope not rotating on the same axis that the earth
does) with Meade’s Field De-Rotator. Attaches to the rear cell O 1.25" Flip-Mirror System. #64 4 A must-have.
of your scope to precisely counter the effects of Alt/Az-induced A necessity for any serious astrophotographer, the flip-mirror
field rotation. system allows you to use both an eyepiece and a camera and “flip”
between them to center, compose, and focus your image before
F Vibration Isolation Pads. Stable platform. Sharper image. shooting. UHTC coated. Includes adjustment screws and locks for
Highly desirable for sensitive imaging applications, these pads precise image centering. Mirror clear aperture: 22mm.
reduce typical vibration damping times to less than one second.
Place one pad under each tripod leg. Includes set of three. P 1.25" and 2" Flip-Mirror System. #647 For larger
eyepieces and chips. Same as 1.25" Flip-Mirror but accepts
G f6.3 Focal Reducer/Field Flattener. Faster, 1.25” or 2" eyepieces. Larger 40mm mirror clear aperture
flatter, better. A photographer’s dream. Improves edge-of- prevents vignetting with large-chip CCD imagers.
field correction and reduces exposure times by close to 50%.
Effectively reduces focal ratio by a factor of 0.63. Threads Q Piggyback brackets. Take your camera for a ride.
into rear cell of any LX90, LX200 or LX400 series scope (or Piggyback photography is a popular and easy way to get started
competing Schmidt-Cassegrains). 1.25" in astrophotography. This bracket lets you attach your camera
(with lens) atop any Meade LX90 or LX200. Polar align
H f /3.3 CCD Focal Reducer/Field Flattener and your scope in equatorial mode, use your scope to guide, and
T-Adapter. Ultra-fast. For ultra-fast CCD imaging with take beautiful wide-field photos of the Milky Way and other
increased edge-of-field resolution and color correction. Reduces regions. Please specify 8, 10, 12, 14 or 16 inch.
exposure times by up to 80%. Threads into rear cell of any LX90,
LX200 or LX400 series scope (or competing Schmidt-Casseg-
rains). Not for visual use or film photography. 1.25"
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Miscellaneous Essentials. All the right tools for the job.
Power your telescope with your car battery, keep dew off your lens, link your telescope to your PC and more with
these useful accessories. Break or lose an item not shown here? It’s probably available as a replacement part. Visit
meade.com or call 800-626-3233.
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Miscellaneous Essentials. (continued)
143
Meade Sky Assurance. Reaches Beyond the Warranty.
Meade Sky Assurance helps you keep your eyes on the stars, not your wallet. It extends
service on your delicate equipment beyond the manufacturer’s warranty and coordinates all
repairs for you using only Meade authorized service providers. Call Meade’s Sky Assurance
hotline to learn more at 1-800-291-3392.
F e at u r e s
• 3 & 5-year plans available
• Begins date of purchase
• Products under $200 replaced
• 100% Parts and labor
• Covers all malfunctions and normal wear and tear
• No deductible
• Transferable and renewable
• No Lemon guarantee
• Toll free hotline
O v e rv i e w
Repair Plans. For products over $200. If the product needs service, you receive an RGA number that allows
you to return the product to the Meade Service Center. Return shipping charges will be covered. Inclusive of
manufacturer’s warranty.
Replacement Plans. For products under $200. If the product needs replacement, you receive an RGA number
that allows you to return the product to the Meade Service Center. If the product is defective, you will receive a
replacement product of like kind, and/or quality. Contract is considered fulfilled after one replacement. Inclusive
of manufacturer’s warranty.
Advance 3-Way Shipping Upgrade. This upgrade means you will be sent a container with packing instructions. All
shipping costs are covered under this upgrade.
word. On the list to the right, you’ll frequently see an artist by the
144
Astrophotographer Credits
Meade thanks the community of astrophotographers whose images fill this catalog. Your work inspires our work. Keep it up.
p.12 (M81) Spiral Galaxy. Jack Newton. p.104 Third Contact. Mike Reynolds.
Meade 16" LX200 & Finger Lakes Dream Machine. Meade 80mm ED APO & Canon 10D.
Exposure: LHaRGB; 10:10:10:12:15 minutes.
p.105 (M100) Spiral Galaxy. Mark Sibole.
p.18 (M51) Whirlpool Galaxy. Mark Sibole. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & Meade 80mm ED APO. Piggybacked on the
Deep Sky Imager PRO II & Meade ETX-125 piggy backed on 10" LX200. 10" LX200. LRGB, 54:32:32:32 Minutes. Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO.
Exposure: LRGB; 136:40:40:40. Guiding: Deep Sky Imager PRO.
p.105 (NGC6992) The Veil Nebula. Mark Sibole.
p.18 (NGC4565) Edge on Spiral Galaxy. Mark Sibole. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & Meade 80 mm APO with Meade f/6.3 reducer
Deep Sky Imager PRO II & Meade ETX-125 piggy backed on 10" LX200 piggyback on 10" LX200. Exposure: HaRGB; 40:32:32:32 minutes.
Exposure: LRGB; 64:30:30:30. Guiding: Deep Sky Imager PRO.
p.111 Saturn. Edward Roach.
p.19 The Moon. Mark Sibole. Meade 8" LX90 & ToUcam.
Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II and 80mm Refractor piggy back on 10" LX200. p.111 The Moon. Mark Sibole.
Imaged with Ha filter (350 frames).
Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO & ETX-90 piggy back on 10" LX200.
p.42 (M31) The Andromeda Galaxy. Steve Hamilton. Exposure: 800 x .0025seconds.
Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & Meade 8" LXD75 Schmidt-Newtonian. p.111 Mars. Chuck Reese.
Exposure: 4 panel mosaic, 1 hour per panel (LRGB – 120 Frames x 30
Meade Deep Sky Imager II & Meade 10"LX200GPS @ f/20. Exposure: 108 x .0442 seconds.
Seconds each).
p.113 (M16) The Eagle Nebula. Jason Ware.
p.43 (M45) The Pleiades. Peter Kennet. Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Exposure: HA, OIII, SII,
Meade 8" LXD75 Schmidt-Newtonian & Olympus OM-1. Exposure: 30 minutes. 100:60:60 minutes. Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager.
p.43 (M81) Spiral Galaxy. Steve Hamilton. p.115 M81 & M82. Jack Newton.
Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & Meade 8" LXD75 Schmidt-Newtonian. Meade 16" LX200 & Finger Lakes Dream Machine. Exposure: LHaRGB; 10:10:10:12:15 mintues.
LRGB; L = 40 x 30 seconds, RGB = 30 x 30 seconds.
p.116 Saturn. Ken Gamble.
p.43 (M8) The Lagoon Nebula. Peter Kennet. Meade Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI™) & Meade 8" LX90 @ f/20.
Meade 8" LXD75 Schmidt-Newtonian & Olympus OM-1. Exposure: 30 minutes.
p.116 (NGC 1977) The Running Man Nebula. Jean-Paul Longchamp.
p.44 The Moon. Jason Ware. Meade Deep Sky Imager II & Meade 10" LX200 @ f/4.Exposure: 15 x 4 min.
Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Mosaic of many Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager.
short exposures.
p.116 (NGC2264) The Christmas Tree Cluster and Cone Nebula. Mark Sibole.
p.46 (NGC 7293) The Helix Nebula. Jason Ware. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & 80mm APO. Exposure: HaRGB; 60:32:32:32 minutes.
Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera.
Narrowband image using Ha and OIII filters. Exposure: 100 minutes per filter. p.117 (NGC 2237) The Rosette Nebula. Matt Taylor.
Meade Deep Sky Imager Pro II & 80mm Refractor on Meade LXD650
p.48 Comet Hyakutake. Jason Ware. equatorial mount. Exposure: 15 panel mosaic, 1 hour per panel
Meade 6" 152 ED Telescope. Film: Fuji HG 400. Exposure: 30 minutes. (6 frames x 10 min. each). Guiding: SBIG ST-2000.
p.56-57 (M42) The Orion Nebula. Jason Ware. p.118 (M109) Spiral Galaxy. Chuck Reese.
Meade 12" LX400. CCD/Film blend: Yankee Robotics CCD, Kodak 400. Meade Deep Sky Imager & 10" LX200GPS. Exposure: : LRGB; 60:32:32:32 minutes.
Exposure: 40:120 minutes. Guiding: Deep Sky Imager PRO.
p.58 South Polar Region of the Moon. Kevin Muenzler. p.118 (M101) Spiral Galaxy. Neil Fleming.
Meade 8" LX90. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO & 127mm Refractor.
p.59 Jupiter. Lee Zagar. Exposure: LRGB; L 49x2min, R 40x1min, G 39x1min, B 37x85secs.
Meade 8" LX90 & Meade Deep Sky Imager. p.118 (M1) The Crab Nebula. Matt Taylor.
p.59 (M57) The Ring Nebula. Alexandre Bouquin. Meade Deep Sky Imager, Deep Sky Imager PRO & Meade 12" LX200GPS @ f/3.52.
Meade 8" LX90 & Philips Vesta Pro Webcam. Exposure: 70 frames x 15 seconds. Exposures: DSI = 10 x 8 Minutes. DSI Pro = 5 x 8 Minutes.
p.59 Saturn. Ed Sampson. p.118 (NGC 7293) The Helix Nebula. Steve Hamilton.
Meade 8" LX90 @ f/20 & TouCam Pro 2. Exposure: 1100 stacked frames. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO & 8" LX90 @ f/3.3. Exposure: LRGB; 112:48:48:24 minutes.
p.61 (M100) The Sombrero Galaxy. Steve Hamilton. p.119 The Moon. Ed Sampson.
Meade 8" LX90 @ f/6.3 & Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO. Exposure: LRGB; Meade Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI) & 8" LX90 @ f/3.3. Mosaic of 5 images.
L=20x3 min, RGB=10x3 min. Processed with Drizzle.
p.119 Saturn. John Bartucci.
p.68 (M13) Globular Cluster in Hercules. Mark De Regt. Meade Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI) & Meade 8" LX200GPS Schmidt-Cassegrain.
Meade 12" LX400 & SBIG ST-8SE CCD Camera. Exposure: 250 x 0.25 seconds.
p.70 (NGC2237 & 2244) The Core of the Rosette Nebula. Jason Ware. p.119 Jupiter. Steve Hamilton.
Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Exposure: SII,HA, Meade Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI) & Meade 8" LX90 @ f/10.
OIII filters, 2:2:2 Hours. Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager. Exposure: 88 images stacked.
p.76 (M20) The Trifid Nebula. Tony Cordaro. p.120 (M16) The Eagle Nebula. Mark Sibole.
Meade LX200-ACF & Canon 350d. Exposure: 10 x 3 minute exposures, ISO800. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO & Meade 80mm ED APO piggybacked on 10" LX200.
Exposure: HaRGB; 72:8:8:8 minutes.
p.92 (NGC6992) The Veil Nebula. By Chuck Domaracki.
Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & 80mm Refractor piggy back on Meade LX200GPS. p.120 (M42) The Great Orion Nebula. Peter O’Brien.
Exposure: 30minutes; Ha and OIII. Meade DSI PRO & Meade 10" LX200. Mosaic of 5 images.
p.93 (M1) The Crab Nebula. Jason Ware. p.120 (M13) Hercules Cluster. Peter O’Brien.
Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Exposure: HaRBG; Meade Deep Sky Imager & Meade 10" LX200 @ f/3.3. Exposure: 65 frames x 15 seconds.
120:40:40:40 minutes. Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager.
p.122 (NGC 2024 + NGC1333) The Flame and Horsehead Nebula. Mark Sibole.
p.94 The Sun in Hydrogen-alpha light. Jack Newton. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & 80mm Refractor piggyback on LX200.
Meade 7" APO & Coronado 90mm Ha Filter & Meade Pictor 1616XT CCD Camera. Exposure: 4 panel mosaic; Flame HaRGB; 60:12:12:12 minutes, Horsehead
HaRGB 60:20:20:20 minutes.
p.96 (NGC2237 & 2244) The Rosette Nebula. Jack Newton.
Meade 7" APO & Finger Lakes Dream Machine CCD camera. LHaRGB; p.122 (NGC 1977) The Running Man Nebula. Mark Sibole.
10:10:5:12:15 minutes. Meade Deep Sky Imager PRO II & ETX-125 @ f/7.5. Exposure: LRGB; 60:12:12:12 minutes.
p.96 The Sun in Hydrogen-alpha light. Jack Newton. p.134 Jupiter. Rodney Berryman.
Coronado 90mm MaxScope 90 & Canon 20Da. Meade Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI) & 7" LX200. Exposure: 2 seconds.
p.96 (M45) The Pleiades. Jack Newton. p.134 Mars. Noel Carboni.
60mm Borg f/4 & Canon 20Da. Meade Lunar Planetary Imager (LPI) & 10"
LX200GPS @ f/20. Exposure: 41 frames stacked.
p.98 (M31) The Andromeda Galaxy. Jason Ware.
Meade 12" Schmidt Camera Telescope. Film: Kodak Tech Pan, Fuji 100. p.134 Saturn. Thierry Legault.
Exposure: 40:30 minutes. Meade 12" LX200 & Philips webcam. Exposure: 900 images stacked.
p.99 The Moon. Jason Ware. p.144 (M27) The Dumbbell Nebula. Jason Ware.
Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Exposure: Mosaic of Meade 12" LX400 and Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Exposure: HA, OIII,
Two Short Exposures. 100:100 minutes. Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager.
p.99 (M8) The Lagoon Nebula. Jason Ware.
Meade 12" LX400 & Yankee Robotics Trifid II CCD camera. Exposure: LRBG,
40:40:40:40 minutes. Guiding: Meade Deep Sky Imager.
$5.00 U.S.A. Part No. 09100-06