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Meade LXD 55 6"F8 Refractor
This telescope came delivered for $995. With all the
features it proclaims, I was apprehensive to say the least. I have been
both pleased and dismayed. I am going to divide up between OTA and
Tripod/Autostar.
OTA: At 27 lbs. w/o the mounting cradle, and 48"
long, this is not for the faint of heart. It is a brute to move about.
For an inexpensive Achromat the optics are very good, with color
fringing only on the very brightest objects (Moon, Venus, Sirius at high
powers). Those objects you would expect chromatic aberration on. It
comes with the MEADE workhorse 8X50 finder scope, but a rinky dinky
PLASTIC 1.25" diagonal. This will be your first add on, a good 2"
diagonal (the OTA is rigged for 2"). I did have to perform surgery on
the OTA when I first got it. I had to pull the focuser end off to fish
out a piece of plastic that was banging about inside the tube. MEADE
says they check these units out, but maybe that crew was smoking dope,
as it made a LOT of noise that you could not miss. All in all, I am very
pleased with the OTA.
Tripod/Autostar: Let the fun begin. The equatorial
head seems more than capable for this tube assembly, but any thing
bigger (MEADE 10" SN) and I think you are in trouble. It may or may not
come with reference marks, and said marks may or may not be in the right
place. Between the manual (MEADE has not got that right yet in all these
years), and the haphazard quality control you may be in trouble. There
are NO manual slow motion controls, it is all driven. The tripod itself
(read legs) is a big brother to the Vixen GP tripod but much cheaper.
The spreader tray is plastic with attachment in the center, which allows
for substantial movement of the legs, and the legs are pop riveted
rather than screwed to the EQ mounting lugs. I have made the following
improvements; filled the legs with foam, drilled out all the pop rivets
and replaced with screws and nylon lock nuts, and drilled the spreader
tray/supports for long bolts and wing nuts at the three corners to
provide stability to the tripod. Now it is stable.
Autostar: Being a star hopper, I have not used the
GOTO functions that much, but it appears to me that the learning curve
is steep. they have a "tracking" function that allows you to just drive
the scope for star hopping. The push buttons are VERY hard to operate
with gloves on, so a lot of push button mistakes are made in the cold,
very frustrating. Tracking is good enough for visual use but not even
close for any type of photography.
Summary: If you are looking for a telescope that
works out of the box, this ain't it. If you do not mind tinkering, it
can be made into a very good telescope. It is not a beginners telescope,
contrary to the advertisements.
Stew
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