Monday, November 4, 2013

A review of the Levenhuk 80mm triplet

I already owned a very good scope for widefield imaging but was looking for something that would be a little more versatile. While I want this to be a review of the Levenhuk 80mm triplet and not a comparison with the Astro Tech AT65EDQ, I need to relate my thinking as to why I thought I needed the new scope.

The Astro Tech scope is a 65mm quadruplet with a built-in field flattener. It provided extremely flat fields all the way to each corner of my images every time I used it. However, there were times I wished it were a faster scope. There were times I wished I had a little wider field of view. And there were times that I wished I could use my 2" diagonal and 2" eyepieces to take in some widefield views. The AT65EDQ would not reach focus with my 2" diagonal in the focuser, and the built-in field flattener prohibited using a reducer/flattener, so I was stuck with its f/6.5 optics that provided a focal length of 420mm. However, it is marketed as an astrograph, and for the last year, it has served me extremely well as just such an instrument.

Enter the Levenhuk 80mm triplet.....

This is the scopes L-shaped mounting bracket bolted to my supplied Losmandy style dovetail.


Upon receiving the scope, the first thing that caught my eye was the paint job. In good lighting this thing is beautiful. It looks to be a pearl white with some metal flakes. I tried to get a close up of the paint but could not get a shot that I felt does it justice.

Comes in a nice little case. The dew shield is extra long compared to other refractors I have used.


The next thing I noticed that I really liked was the threaded metal dust cap. This cap will never fall off and you can take darks in broad daylight and never need to remove the camera from the scope.

The 2" crayford focuser seems to be relatively smooth, but since buying a Moonlite for my newtonian, I can only say that it is adequate. There is a lock for rotating the focuser which is nice for framing a target if you have not already taken flat frames. However, it does not have a screw to lock focus, only a tension screw.

Besides not having a lock screw on the focuser, there were only a couple of things I did not like about the scope. First, it does not come with a mounting bracket for a finder scope. It also does not come with mounting rings. It comes with only the L-bracket that is bolted to the Losmandy style D-plate in the photo. I have since purchased a set of 90mm ID William Optics rings and made a plate to go on top of the rings to mount the finder scope bracket to hold my 50mm Orion mini guidescope. The configuration seems to be very solid.

We all know that getting new astronomy equipment also brings with it lots of clouds, sometimes for days on end. I did manage first light a few days later for a bit of observing with the new telescope. I used my Meade 2" diagonal with the Explore Scientific 24mm 82 degree apparent fov eyepiece for some outstanding widefield views. This provided a field of view of more than 4 degrees with a magnification factor of 20X. The views were extremely crisp and I decided to up the magnification and check collimation with a star test. For this, I installed my Astro Tech 2X barlow in the diagonal coupled with my Explore Scientific ES82 8.8mm eyepiece and slewed to Vega. The diffraction rings showed a perfectly concentric pattern, and when bringing the bright star into focus, I could not see even a hint of chromatic aberration. The premium FPL-53 optics perform flawlessly.

The brief first night of viewing the stars between breaks in the clouds satisfied me for a little while, but I was anxious to see what it would do with my Canon DSLR installed in the focuser. It would be a few nights before the Moon would allow me to do any imaging, so I called Astronomics and ordered their Astro Tech 0.8X reducer/field flattener. This reduced the focal ratio of the scope from f/6 down to f/4.8 and dropped the focal length almost 100mm from 480mm down to 384mm. The Moon allowed only a very short first night of imaging, but this is what I was able to produce in one hour using five minute subs (12X300sec) at ISO 800.

M33, Triangulum galaxy

I want to add some more data to the M33 before posting a full resolution image to Astrobin. Fortunately, I was able to get in some serious imaging a few nights later. This image of Andromeda galaxy is a combination of 53 subs of 300 seconds (4.4 hrs) at ISO 800.

M31, Andromeda galaxy. I was quite pleased with how this one turned out.

The Pleiades (M45) was done over 2 nights and is a total of 100 subs of 300sec (8.3 hrs) at ISO 800.

This image of M45 is my personal record for integration time. I really wanted to pick up the faint dust in this area.

Then I decided to try the Heart nebula, IC 1805. This target is best shot in h-alpha, but I thought I would     
give it a try in RGB with my DSLR. It is 48 subs of 300 seconds (4 hrs) at ISO 800. I probably should have gone with longer subs, but left it at 300 seconds, because I have a good library of dark frames at 300 seconds. Someday I hope to own a nice CCD camera and some narrowband filters. I think it will help greatly on targets such as this one.

IC 1805, the Heart nebula

Full resolution images can be found here in my Astrobin gallery: http://www.astrobin.com/users/rflinn68/  The corner stars look very good on the M45 image, but not so good on the Heart. The camera was never removed, so I suspect this is due to my focusing technique. I probably will need to start focusing on a star somewhere between the center and one of the corners. Everything considered, I am very happy with the new scope.

Here is the scope set up for imaging with the William Optics rings and dew heaters. I made a plate to go on top of the rings for mounting the finder bracket to hold the Orion 50mm mini guidescope.

I ended up selling my AT65EDQ and keeping the Levenhuk 80mm triplet. It is simply a much more versatile telescope and better fits my needs. For starters, it has 15mm more aperture, which is always good. It is a faster scope at its native f/6 and much faster with the reducer at f/4.8 and will give me a couple of focal lengths (384mm and 480mm) to choose from once I purchase a regular field flattener. It is also an excellent grab and go telescope for observing that I can use with my 2" accessories and eyepieces. 

The key word I keep coming back to in regard to this scope is "versatile." I am very pleased with the scope and expect to enjoy it for years to come for both observing and imaging. Great job, Levenhuk, and thank you for such a wonderful instrument!

Saturday, November 2, 2013

The Seven Sisters

I was able to get in another test image with the Levenhuk 80mm triplet. I'm really starting to like this scope and Astro Tech focal reducer/field flattener combo. Not missing the AT65EDQ quite so much now. This image of M45, also known as The Pleiades and The Seven Sisters, was shot over two nights. I was able to stack 100 five minutes subs with this one for a total integration time of 8.3 hours. This is the most data I have put into an image to date. I was really hoping to get the faint dust surrounding the cluster to show up so I spent a good amount of time on it.

The Seven Sisters and the Andromeda galaxy were the first two images Cara and I stacked almost a year ago now. A lot has been learned in the last year and its nice to look back and see improvement made in our imaging and processing techniques.