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There are some odd methods involving Cheshires and laser collimators to collimate SCTs, but it’s not as simple as dropping them into the scope like with a Newtonian so I personally wouldn’t bother.

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The scope shown here oddly has Philips head screws, but most SCTs use Allen head/hex key screws. You can buy thumbscrews (sold as “Bob’s Knobs” among others) to replace these, but I’ve found that the thumbscrews seem to work their way out of collimation more often and lead to people at star parties and outreach events ruining your collimation by fiddling with them.

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I am sure you’ve figured this out by now, but using the red dot and aligning to 3 stars is the process for aligning the telescope to the stars for viewing. Collimation is the process of aligning the telescope’s internals with each other. Hopefully you got it sorted out! – Adam

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You can usually adjust your secondary’s tip/tilt with 3 or 4 small Allen or Philips head screws recessed in the spider/secondary mirror holder. You can rotate or move the secondary mirror up/down by loosening a center screw or nut and retightening it.

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The Nikon lens mounts are these: S-mount: Nikon I, Nikon M, Nikon S, Nikon S2, Nikon SP, Nikon S3, Nikon S4 rangefinder cameras.

You can’t really use a laser or Cheshire to collimate a Schmidt-Cassegrain, so collimating on a star is the only real option you have.

No matter what collimation tool you’re opting for, you need to know how to adjust the mirrors, both primary and secondary (only if needed).

However, I still recommend at least checking collimation on a star to be sure you’ve done a good job. Point your scope at Polaris if you’re in the northern hemisphere, or a bright star near the pole in the southern hemisphere, switch to a high-power eyepiece and slightly defocus it.

Believe it or not, refractors can be out of collimation occasionally. Funny enough, I’ve had it happen more often with expensive refractors than cheap ones.

However, later, I realized that collimation is nothing to be frightened of and is quite an easy process, even if its a Newtonian telescope. If I can assemble and set up my telescope properly, I’m also capable of collimating it correctly. It’s that simple.

The collimation process with Schmidt-Cassegrains is a little more tedious compared to a Newtonian, but it’s nothing to be afraid of.

Your primary mirror will always have 3 collimation bolts/knobs at the back of its supporting cell. Adjusting the collimation bolts adjusts the tip and tilt of the primary mirror for alignment.

Figure 1: The waist of a Gaussian beam is defined as the location where the irradiance is 1/e2 (13.5%) of its maximum value ... In the above equations, λ is the ...

First, make sure the secondary mirror is aligned as in the below image. Your secondary is aligned if you can see the entire primary mirror and its three mirror clips with an even ring of the tube walls around it.

Lasers can dramatically speed up collimation and are very simple to use. The only catch is that on many cheap lasers, the beam itself may need collimation! You’ll need to throw together some sort of simple V-block or jig (or use your scope’s accessory tray) and adjust the laser collimator’s small Allen screws until the beam/dot doesn’t move when the laser is rotated.

To align your secondary, turn the screws (if you need to) until the laser beam is centered on the primary mirror. Adding a center dot of some kind to your primary can help with this, but I don’t find it to be a necessity.

The primary rests on a series of supports on a ring or cell, which sit on springs that loosen/tighten when the collimation bolts are adjusted.

Newtonians are the most likely to need collimation. I recommend checking collimation every time you take your Newtonian out for observation, as there is usually a 50% chance it needs to be tweaked at the very least.

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The secondary should be centered in the primary, and if you’ve done a good job aligning the primary, it should appear centered in your view as well.

Image

Cylindrical coordinate system ... The latter distance is given as a positive or negative number depending on which side of the reference plane faces the point. A ...

Thanks for all this info. I’m a beginner with new Astro Fi 130mm scope and I have been able to collimate with its red dot finder but then they ask you to align further by clicking on 3 different stars and not only can I not work this but also I don’t understand why this must be done. The guy at the shop can’t explain this so I need help badly and hope you might explain PLEASE !!?

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This wide angle IR lens has a field of view almost double that of the standard 25° lens. Perfect for wide or tall targets or when working in confined areas.

In practice, these 3 locking screws do nothing and serve as a mere hindrance to collimation. In some cases, these could hit the back of your primary mirror if the scope is dropped and damage it as a result. I’d advise you to just remove the locking screws.

Adjusting the collimation of the objective lens is usually done with either 1 or 2 sets of 3 screws at the front of the lens cell, which can be accessed by pulling off or unscrewing the dew shield. Just adjust until the star looks perfectly symmetrical, both in and out of focus. If your refractor doesn’t have any screws in its lens cell, you’re out of luck.

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Good collimation is required with any telescope or optical system to achieve good, sharp views across the entire field. Below is how I collimate my telescopes that belong to either of the 4 major telescope types: refractors, Newtonian reflectors, Schmidt-Cassegrains (SCT), or Maksutov-Cassegrains (Mak).

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Collimating an SCT on a star is a similar experience to a Newtonian apart from the adjustments requiring tools. Just defocus a bright star and adjust the screws until the “donut” is perfectly centered:

More expensive lasers offer smaller dot sizes, reticles, holographic displays, etc. with theoretically more accuracy, but on almost all instruments I’ve found that the sub-$50 collimators work just fine once the alignment of the laser itself is tweaked.

Most mass-manufactured telescopes also have 3 locking bolts or screws, which are, in theory, meant to keep the collimation more stable during usage.

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Most Maks have small screws behind the primary mirror, which should allow you to tilt it. Apart from the collimation being done via the primary instead of the secondary mirror, the overall experience is basically like collimating a Schmidt-Cassegrain.

I realise this is old but it may help others. The 3 star alignment is not the mirror alignment. Collimating is alignment of the mirrors.

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Collimating on a star is a relatively simple, tool-free method, but with a long scope, it’s annoying to fiddle with the screws and then come back to the eyepiece.

Before doing anything with your collimation tool, make sure it is square with the focuser and not tilted by the thumbscrew. I do this by pressing the collimator firmly into the focuser, then quickly tightening the thumbscrew. If you have a compression ring in your focuser instead of the thumbscrews, you won’t have to worry much about this issue.

SCTs don’t need collimation very often, but it’s still worth checking every session – particularly if you plan on doing astrophotography or high-magnification planetary/double star viewing.

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This may result in your target star moving outside the field of view, but it’ll always move in the direction the mirror has been tipped; if you’ve tightened a bolt, it’ll move toward that direction, and if you’ve loosened it, it’ll move away from the direction of that bolt.

If the “donut” (the shadow of the secondary mirror) is centered on the diffraction rings of the star, your collimation is good. If it isn’t, adjust the collimation bolts until it is centered.

An amateur astronomer and telescope maker from Connecticut who has been featured on TIME magazine, National Geographic, La Vanguardia, and Clarin, The Guardian, The Arizona Daily Star, and Astronomy Technology Today and had won the Stellafane 1st and 3rd place Junior Awards in the 2018 Convention. Zane has owned over 425 telescopes, of which around 400 he has actually gotten to take out under the stars. These range from the stuff we review on TelescopicWatch to homemade or antique telescopes; the oldest he has owned or worked on so far was an Emil Busch refractor made shortly before the outbreak of World War I. Many of these are telescopes that he repaired or built.

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Collimation caps usually come with most reflectors nowadays, and if you lack one, you can get a film canister (rare these days), cut the bottom off, and poke a small hole in the lid just wider than your pupil to force you to center your eyeball on it. Buying a Cheshire collimation eyepiece is probably preferable if you can afford it, though.

3 stars alignment is so the scope computer knows where it is looking at the night sky. When used with the date, time and location the 3 star alignment resolves the scope direction to objects and allows for tilt, in case it isn’t level.

Next, you must align the primary. To align the primary, adjust the three collimation bolts until you have a view looking like this:

Magnification, numerical aperture, working distance, and resolution are all related for infinity corrected objectives. Magnification is calculated by dividing ...

Collimation (alignment of telescope mirrors and/or lenses) scared me so much that I opted not to buy a Newtonian reflector for my first telescope and ended up buying a not-so-great NexStar 4SE, a Maksutov-Cassegrain type of telescope that rarely needs collimation. Newtonians and Schmidt-Cassegrains are the telescope types that are most likely to lose good collimation, as they have the most moving parts.