10 Most Useless Astronomy Products (Trigger Warning)

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  • čas přidán 4. 08. 2024
  • I continue my quest to alienate myself from the entire astronomy community.
    Support the channel by buying Dylan's Telescopes, Cameras & Equipment using the links below!
    EQUIPMENT LIST
    ----
    Celestron 11" Edge HD Telescope
    USA : bit.ly/3JB95JE
    Celestron RASA F2 11" Telescope
    USA : bit.ly/3Jy4Ezl
    International : amzn.to/3ABsVBz
    QHY268M Mono CMOS Camera
    USA : bit.ly/33u4k5w
    Skywatcher EQ8Rh Pro Mount
    USA : bit.ly/3gTdWJX
    AUS : bit.ly/3dxdRv1
    NexDome Observatory by Sidereal Trading (Australia)
    www.siderealtrading.com.au
    Celestron RASA 8" F2 Telescope
    USA : bit.ly/3GTUwiU
    International : amzn.to/3G4nlbP
    Celestron NexYZ 3-Axis Smartphone Adapter
    USA : bit.ly/351K2ki
    International : amzn.to/3g20wLd
    Celestron CGX Mount
    USA : bit.ly/3BtPVCF
    Lunt40mm Solar Telescope
    USA : bit.ly/3sP8KMX
    Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer 2i Pro Pack
    USA : bit.ly/3uUVw3O
    International : amzn.to/3ABLAwQ
    ZWO ASI 174MM (Planetary / Solar Camera)
    USA : bit.ly/3uXpEM8
    International : amzn.to/3rXqJAj
    ZWO ASI 120MM (Guide Camera)
    USA : bit.ly/352iBXg
    ZWO ASI 1600MM (Deep Space Camera)
    USA : bit.ly/3HVtvg1
    International : amzn.to/3rXqJAj
    Celestron 0.7x reducer for 11" Edge HD
    USA : bit.ly/3gTDJSy
    Celestron 0.7x reducer for 9.25” Edge HD
    USA : bit.ly/3sNyY2o
    Celestron 9.25” Edge HD
    USA : bit.ly/3LISupw
    Canon 6D mkII DSLR
    International : amzn.to/2CbiVER
    Tokina 16-28mm Lens
    International : amzn.to/3fdFJCo
    Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L III USM Ultra Wide Angle Zoom Full Frame
    International : amzn.to/3G9kjmP
    Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM Lens
    International : amzn.to/3H9yPfA
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1K

  • @IAMDRREMULAKK
    @IAMDRREMULAKK Před 2 lety +57

    I'm very interested in Astronomy, but paused this video at the 18 second mark after I realized that this was just another of the millions of douche-bags trying to become famous through social media. Comment. Close video.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 2 lety +47

      I’ve been exposed lol

    • @BritishBeachcomber
      @BritishBeachcomber Před 2 lety +1

      You really don't get what Dylan is all about. Who's the douche-bag? You's the douche-bag.

    • @doccortex1203
      @doccortex1203 Před rokem +2

      LOL - I doubt very much he would be come a millionaire from this - grow up

    • @poruatokin
      @poruatokin Před rokem +13

      Well, you're the one who is losing out. As a Brit I am well tuned to the Aussie style laconic dry wit and humor that Dylan peppers into his incredibly informative and high brow videos. You need to loosen up.

    • @dadwhitsett
      @dadwhitsett Před rokem +3

      Someone needs a hug🥰🥰🥰

  • @nikivan
    @nikivan Před 3 lety +133

    After reading the manual, I grabbed a sky chart and went to my telescope pier. Attached the scope, removed the dust cap, installed a 2" to 1.25" adapter and slid in an eye piece protected by a luminance filter. Connected the power brick to the mount and started my astronomy session.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +15

      sounds like a wild night 😆

    • @landspide
      @landspide Před 2 lety +2

      rebel yell 👍

    • @brianhayward8240
      @brianhayward8240 Před rokem +6

      ​@@DylanODonnell Late to the party but (Google finally recommended this video)... Since we're all having fun here. I guess the other option is that he could have setup his astrophotography mount, spent 20 minutes polar aligning, another 30 minutes getting his astro computer to connect to all of the gadgets attached to it, another hour getting the sky telemetry downloaded and plate solving working, another 3 hours struggling with guiding so that stars were only just egg shaped, then finally got 1 hour of photos before the clouds rolled in and he had to pack up all his gear. Anyway, fun video Dylan, I got a chuckle from it. :)

    • @rosscayley8773
      @rosscayley8773 Před rokem +6

      ...and after seeing some really cool stuff with my own eyes for real for a couple of hours, I decided I wanted a nice photo of it to remember it by.....so I grabbed a beer, jumped on Google for 5 minutes, and downloaded a beautiful image of it taken by some other random dude who had spent 3 nights in a row and 5 hours on his PC wrestling with 4 different bits of freeware preparing it for me...

    • @nikivan
      @nikivan Před rokem +5

      @@rosscayley8773 Yeah, but that's like watching a porn instead of having a girlfriend.

  • @michaelsherck5099
    @michaelsherck5099 Před 3 lety +129

    "We don't need to cut down trees to see the sky." You've never seen my yard.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +6

      Hehe touché

    • @matte5810
      @matte5810 Před 2 lety

      HAHA same thats gold

    • @rhetoricalquestion6009
      @rhetoricalquestion6009 Před 2 lety +1

      _"... So I did what all good astronomers do: I got the pole saw out."_ -- Dylan O'Donnell • Oct 8, 2021
      _"Spent ALL my Ad rev & Patreon Money on THIS...."_ • at 3:56.

    • @ragrabau
      @ragrabau Před 2 lety +2

      Actually I had 8 trees (large pine trees) cut down so I can see the night sky.

    • @kaiko-san
      @kaiko-san Před 2 lety +2

      @@ragrabau Are you the Lorax's evil cousin?

  • @squirrelsrus1
    @squirrelsrus1 Před 3 lety +194

    I'm offended that you're trying to offend me.
    I'm also offended that you did the entire video from your kitchen.
    Also, I'm offended that you provided a trigger warning. What if I prefer to be surprised when I get triggered instead of knowing it is coming.
    I'm so offended, I hit like.
    I'm already subscribed so no, I'm not clicking on it. CZcams won't even LET ME and THAT offends me too.
    I eagerly await your next highly offensive video.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +43

      I shall try harder next time my friend.

    • @deepastro7460
      @deepastro7460 Před 3 lety +2

      @@DylanODonnell lololololol

    • @ryanmichaelhaley
      @ryanmichaelhaley Před 3 lety +7

      This comment triggered me, without warning, which also triggered me, while watching the video, which triple triggered me.

    • @squirrelsrus1
      @squirrelsrus1 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ryanmichaelhaley This offends me, too. :)

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Před 3 lety

      @@squirrelsrus1 You know.... I need a new fence around my property... So... Give me all your OFFENCE! (snicker!)

  • @BIGV1N
    @BIGV1N Před 3 lety +77

    The only way you could properly offend me would be to exclude "everything is meaningless and we're all going to die" from one of your videos. Instant unsub.

    • @adamg2671
      @adamg2671 Před 3 lety +4

      Nothing means everything and we're all going to live forever.

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Před 3 lety +5

      "Fame! I'm gonna live forever!!!!"

  • @vnth2186
    @vnth2186 Před 3 lety +96

    07:03 every visual astronomer has left the chat

    • @iwicaks
      @iwicaks Před 3 lety +16

      No, im still here. Probably the only 1 left...

    • @davepastern
      @davepastern Před 3 lety +4

      @Vineeth - nope. I love both visual and imaging. Visual is a test of my eyes and observing skills, imaging is a completely different kettle of fish Both have a firm place in this wonderful hobby.

    • @Durkan34
      @Durkan34 Před 3 lety +5

      No... I actually burst out laughing.
      Although I do both visual and AP (badly)...
      Well more accurately I do visual and endless futzing around in the dark with widgets and cameras and a laptop until it finally goes cloudy.

    • @AndrejDoms
      @AndrejDoms Před 3 lety +8

      I still do visual, but he is right. For most people it is boring after a while. Most objects are just to dim for our eyes...

    • @douweodh4146
      @douweodh4146 Před 3 lety +2

      Loved your vid and your sarcasm 👍. Don’t completely agree however on visual. For instance you will never be able to image the Double Cluster as beautifully as your eyes can observe it. Cheers from The Netherlands

  • @caleb8239
    @caleb8239 Před 3 lety +91

    I was a tripod man right up until a neurological disease left me in a wheelchair. At first I built a cart to transport the mount and telescope from storage to the observing site but that was a still a lot of work for me, so I cut a John Deere cultivator bar in half, sank it in concrete, and built a pier. Much easier solution for me to get set up quickly, but I never would have needed one if I hadn't become disabled.

    • @CarpeNoctem42
      @CarpeNoctem42 Před 3 lety +16

      That's called working with what you have and not letting others tell you what can or can't do. A fine example of the exeption for the use of piers, I'm sure Dylan would agree (preferably over a pint)!

    • @mycarolinaskies
      @mycarolinaskies Před 3 lety +6

      Ah but you totally missed #1 then, you should be using a camera so there be no need to get right next to the telescope!

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Před 3 lety +3

      You ought to look into the use of remote automated telescopes.

    • @donloughrey1615
      @donloughrey1615 Před 3 lety +1

      I have to build one next year( in a roll off shed). I'm getting too old to carry my Lx200 light bucket. Clear skies to you.

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Před 3 lety +2

      @@donloughrey1615 Have you ever seen the plastic dome observatory? We affectionately refer to it as "the dog house". My club has one. Anyway, I've been puzzling over how I might build one for my back yard. Have you seen those large plastic water tanks farmers use? One of those might be adapted to serve as a plastic observatory. I'm thinking about getting one of those, cutting a large hole in the top, and then using an inverted circular plastic water trough as the removable cover.

  • @jmannUSMC
    @jmannUSMC Před 3 lety +70

    It has been an honor to be offended. I will now go cry into my eyepiece dustcaps.

    • @Ms_Dana
      @Ms_Dana Před 3 lety

      that would clean the dust off of them .lol

  • @desmondellis657
    @desmondellis657 Před 3 lety +15

    I’m an imager and a visual astronomer. I live to look through the eyepiece if one scope as I’m imagining through another. You can look at all kinds of glossy pics if astronomical objects in magazines and online, but to see that faint, fuzzy blob through the eyepiece, while not as spectacular as the glossy color photo, is still very awe-inspiring. You ever scan the Milky Way with your imaging system? I still need to grow up, but not in this respect.

  • @tomasselnekovic
    @tomasselnekovic Před 3 lety +7

    visual astronomy is a the most beautiful and relaxing activity, it cannot be compared to astrophotography at all. Seeing these distant objects real time is something which will stay in your heart forever. sorry Dylan :)

  • @jonwatson654
    @jonwatson654 Před 3 lety +22

    Living in Scotland, every single piece of astro equipment I own is completely useless, because the weather is so bad.
    There's always tomorrow as my accountant used to say, before he died. ✌

    • @keithkorthals6183
      @keithkorthals6183 Před 3 lety +1

      Think I saw land flying over once! Usually just clouds...not sure I believed in the place before that.

    • @Silent_GM
      @Silent_GM Před 2 lety +2

      Fellow Scot here. I bought a new scope 29 days ago and I've had 29 days of cloud!! So I'd have to say that a telescope is the most useless piece of astro equipment for us who are haunted by cloud.

    • @claudiogoncalves1985
      @claudiogoncalves1985 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Silent_GM almost everyone is haunted by bad weather or lack of time when get some new equipament but, unless you live in Scotland, this will pass.

    • @romeoneverdies
      @romeoneverdies Před rokem

      well you can recycle it to birdwatching :P

  • @vladimirlenin4080
    @vladimirlenin4080 Před 3 lety +35

    It was okay until number one. But an eyepiece?? Useless?! I swear to god I'm gonna buy a plane ticket to Australia just to force you to retract that.

    • @kevinradtke3767
      @kevinradtke3767 Před 3 lety +3

      Right as soon as I can find my glasses so I can see my computer screen

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Před 3 lety

      Yeah, but whats the point? You will have already retracted your landing gear for the flight over... So what will you do if he refuses?

    • @TexasTimelapse
      @TexasTimelapse Před 3 lety +6

      After tinkering with astrophotography, I have to admit, visual took a backseat.
      However, using an eyepiece a couple of times helped me get past first base by impressing the ladies with Saturn. ; )

    • @donaldfawcett9965
      @donaldfawcett9965 Před 3 lety

      Don't forget to bring an extra three and a half thou for your mandatory 14 day quarantine. The shareholders will thank you.

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety +4

      Save the $$$ and buy another eyepiece. Visual astronomy is magic.

  • @JMac85X
    @JMac85X Před 3 lety +40

    Celestron RASA sucks! My 70mm Tasco on my birdbath pier is top notch!

    • @GarnettLeary
      @GarnettLeary Před 3 lety +4

      Rasa is an overpriced portrait lens for stars. Read that again. Portrait photography doesn’t belong in astronomy. The Rasa surpasses even dust caps in uselessness. “I’d love some nice bokeh in this emission nebula”...said no imager ever. The image that thing produces is so flat Photoshop includes an “add depth” filter.

    • @cliveroberts415
      @cliveroberts415 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes RASA is crap. I bought one to get some nice views of the moon and stuff and it was faulty. No hole in the back to stick my eyepiece in.

    • @JMac85X
      @JMac85X Před 3 lety +1

      @GO TEXAS RANGERS ! well I do live in Texas, isn't it a prerequisite to drink alcohol. Sure I have expensive telescopes and idk how to use them but I'm drunk and happy and that's all that matters.

    • @patrickmcvittie4971
      @patrickmcvittie4971 Před 3 lety

      Personally I think the RASA is the perfect telescope. Short exposure times for amazing photos, I don’t have to wait around all night. In addition long focal lengths just give blurry images, the RASA lets you take amazing nebulae photos without worrying about sky blur...

    • @MrProulx
      @MrProulx Před 3 lety

      @@GarnettLeary tell that to this guy. www.astrobin.com/users/Marcel_Drechsler/ of course you'll never be on this level judging by what you do.

  • @robertpascale3248
    @robertpascale3248 Před 3 lety +52

    Loving where the guy is holding the soldering iron. Toasty.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +6

      Hehe useless.

    • @earth9258
      @earth9258 Před 3 lety +1

      Missed that 😂

    • @BIGV1N
      @BIGV1N Před 3 lety +1

      I didn't catch it till #8. That bass drop at the end though, not quite as subtle.

    • @_Piers_
      @_Piers_ Před 3 lety +3

      There's a worrying amount of stock images of people holding soldering irons wrongly...they're mostly poking them at PC motherboards as well.

  • @endolf
    @endolf Před 3 lety +20

    I'm from the UK, coming to the end of month 2 of solid cloud cover, all my astrophotography gear is useless right now....

    • @sunneh666
      @sunneh666 Před 3 lety +1

      Dutchman here. Same story. Stop sending over clouds Brits.

    • @geert5811
      @geert5811 Před 3 lety

      Belgium: idem dito

    • @endolf
      @endolf Před 3 lety

      I've not even ordered any toys! :)

  • @yucas997
    @yucas997 Před 3 lety +115

    You know what, I do planetary astrophotography and I agree with all the things you said, except for the last one. Eyepieces.
    I think there's a big difference between watching a picture (even of your own) and observing something. Especially on the Moon!
    Pics are cool. But to see things, its way more involving. At least for me. 😉
    P.s. you got the coolest intro 🤙

    • @DanielBoychuk
      @DanielBoychuk Před 3 lety +19

      Seeing Jupiter’s moons or Saturn’s rings the first time with my eyes was amazing. Of course I had seen pictures a million times before but it was different.

    • @wanderingbrummie
      @wanderingbrummie Před 3 lety +15

      I agree, the visual image is inferior, but you are directly observing the same photons that left the target, gives you a personal connection that isn’t there with a digital image. I love both visual and EEA, but even with the latter I’m just trying to get something workable I can see in ”real time”. I’ve no interest in spending hours generating beautiful pictures that are still inferior to anything I can pull off the web. But I can see how people get hooked. I waste hours playing golf when I know the results are going to be embarrassing! Not seen this channel before, but I’ll be back.

    • @donloughrey1615
      @donloughrey1615 Před 3 lety +12

      I totally agree. When I show someone an image I took, of course they like them but they seem to them like pages in a magazine and just look for a moment and that's it. But when they look through an eyepiece The reaction is WOW I had no idea it is so cool and mesmerized, they have to be told "hey it's my turn".
      No one has ever said 'can I come over and look at the images. But regularly I do hear 'can I come over next time and look through your telescope?'
      I do love imaging and it is necessary for looking deeper into space than an E.P. Looking in real time awesome.

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety +3

      I agree completely. There is a kind of magic in the photons from distant objects hitting my retina. Call me sentimental or old-fashioned, but it reminds me that I am a bit of sentient matter in a slow and subtle dance with all the other matter in the universe.

    • @johngentri4270
      @johngentri4270 Před 3 lety +7

      Lost count how many people I turned on to astronomy by taking off my camera and putting on a lens and giving them a look.

  • @michaelkbutler
    @michaelkbutler Před 3 lety +8

    "Proper astronomy???" I find visual atronomy to be SUPER fulfilling....to each his own, right? my budget wont allow for all that hardware

  • @Robert08010
    @Robert08010 Před 3 lety +5

    While I would not agree that eyepieces are useless, I would agree that a camera is 100% absolute necessity. I discovered that the first time i pointed my DSLR (without telescope) at a Nebula and suddenly saw it for the first time. OMG, its actually there... Not a fuzzy undefined blur, but I can now see a dust cloud. And all it took was a 1 second exposure to go from not seeing nuthin to seeing something.

  • @pdc023
    @pdc023 Před 3 lety +41

    Really, I'm not offended, and I don't do much visual astronomy myself anymore, but eyepieces and visual astronomy are still, and will always be, essential to public outreach and sparking that fascination in astronomy into young minds.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Před 2 lety +3

      John “come look at the moon” Dobson.

  • @voDKaandEric
    @voDKaandEric Před 3 lety +17

    I built my own pier for about 40 bucks and love it. It is sooooo much easier to push the roof back than setup over and over again.. You are completely right that it makes no difference in image quality. LOVE your channel! And btw, that guy soldering is really going to burn his fingers... just say'n.....

    • @ragrabau
      @ragrabau Před 2 lety

      My pier was $0.00 - 11.5 feet 12 inch diameter. Works great in my 8ft dome.

  • @madagoselis
    @madagoselis Před 3 lety +9

    Luminance filter - optics with lenses are designed for optimum wavelength range and they can focus all that range pretty well, but the further away you get from that "design range" the worst the performance gets (ability to focus all wavelengths to same spot size). If target emits wavelengths that are very far apart you can not focus both of those perfectly. This should not be an issue for emission nebulae, but maybe for stars it is? Since they are broadband. Anyway - that's the theory behind it, thou I only saw this effect on daylight cameras with CMOS sensors, since I do not have a mono camera for astrophotography :) Generally this inability to focus all light rays look like blur on photos.

  • @prabhuvpop
    @prabhuvpop Před 3 lety +9

    all okay but eyepiece? you really should change the title to 10 Most useless Astrophotography products, because in Astronomy eyepiece is one of the most important accessories without that you can't do any observational astronomy, you have offended all the visual observers in one single point.

  • @johntremain8403
    @johntremain8403 Před 3 lety +6

    When you live somewhere that has winter, a pier is necessary due to frost heaving in the spring. I live in Ohio and anything you don't want to lose alignment on you need to imbed a slab around 36" down to get below the winter frost layer. Otherwise when the ground thaws in the spring, your slab on grade will be a few degrees high on one side or the other. I don't have a large scope, so I'm tripod. But if I did and I wanted to hold alignment, I'd need not only a pier, but one on a deep foundation.

  • @guyyanez6949
    @guyyanez6949 Před 3 lety +7

    Yes, eyepieces are useless. Please do you a favor and send me your eyepiece collection. I will make an effort and keep them.

  • @TheSpacePlaceYT
    @TheSpacePlaceYT Před 3 lety +22

    "Go ahead and dislike the video."
    *NO DISLIKES*
    That lets you know...

  • @rapid13
    @rapid13 Před 3 lety +4

    Meh. The only folks who dismiss visual astronomy are those who can't find the target in the EP anyway.

  • @flanerpete2040
    @flanerpete2040 Před 3 lety +13

    Did the astrophotography thing back in the 80s and 90s. You know, with star charts, setting circles, film and manual guiding for up to an hour. Had a blast and learned a lot. Now, I enjoy the visual aspect of looking up using "useless" TV eyepieces, but am not offended in the least. Keep up the good work, Dylan! 😊

  • @mohammedalshethry4862
    @mohammedalshethry4862 Před 3 lety +1

    hey Dylan, love your videos please keep doing them, I want to know if you can make a video about how do you know if you have enough signal to noise ratio for your images or you still need more exposure, can too much exposure ruin your photos? I once photographed orion overnight is it overkill? not sure.

  • @ttp_007
    @ttp_007 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Dylan, it's important for people to realize that every CZcamsr has unique personalities and perspectives. Humor, especially, varies widely, and if someone doesn't appreciate it, it's better to move on than to leave hurtful comments.
    I've observed that there's a strong urge among people to showcase and boast about having the best setup. Some individuals tend to overshadow others, seeking validation or trying to appear more knowledgeable. Then there are those who seek reassurance from others to feel confident about their choices and approaches.
    I appreciate your video content, your enthusiasm for Astronomy and your unique dry humor. Keep going strong, and don't let negativity get to you.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 2 měsíci +1

      I like to engage with all comments. They are 99.9 % positive :) I’ll troll a troll back which they often don’t expect. Some of my followers are people who left a negative comment but we’re friends now.

  • @thomaspetersen5114
    @thomaspetersen5114 Před 3 lety +3

    Lol, well played. The only one that gave me pause was the lum filter. Having it gives me a focusing routine on lum with parfocal r, g, b filters. Besides, I do appreciate that little extra dust protection in from of the image sensor.

  • @caput_in_astris
    @caput_in_astris Před 3 lety +12

    Completely wrong, without a pier and allen keys, the Hubble telescope wouldn’t have been able to such great pictures.
    And I remember Hubble also had a dust cup - they even forgot to remove it when they first launched it
    😅

    • @matte5810
      @matte5810 Před 2 lety

      Did they fly it back to take it off :P

    • @caput_in_astris
      @caput_in_astris Před 2 lety +1

      @@matte5810 Actually yes 😅 In december 1993 (Endeavour mission STS 61)

    • @matte5810
      @matte5810 Před 2 lety +1

      @@caput_in_astris HAHA thats fukn Gold

    • @epic_playz4283
      @epic_playz4283 Před 2 lety

      * TRIGGERED *

  • @skesinis
    @skesinis Před 2 lety +2

    The Allen key was probably one of my most used ones but for a different reason. I was using it as a lever for my focuser instead of a peg. 😂 That was until I made one myself with a stepper motor and an Arduino. Great video as usual Dylan!

  • @howardbond1583
    @howardbond1583 Před 3 lety +2

    Great Show Dylan!! I agree on many of your Top 10, but you have to remember I’m old. I’m trying to get more experience with my digital camera, but there nothing like seeing a youngster or old person looking up from your telescope the first time they see Saturn.
    Looking at a monitor just doesn’t compare! Take Care Dylan & Stay Safe

  • @wesleydonnelly2141
    @wesleydonnelly2141 Před 3 lety +5

    lol you are hilarious at times Dylan!! The bit about the disgustingly expensive feather touch focusers is absolutely spot on!! I do exactly as you suggested, I made a little arm that connects to the focuser and it allows me to focus in on object precisely and it didn't cost me $400+ !! My biggest gripe about this Hobby that we all know and love is disgustingly high costs!!?? It puts 95% of potential Astrophotographers off the Hobby because either they can't afford it, or refuse to pay the insanely high prices! Take for example something simple like a set of Tube Rings for you OTA to mount onto your ( also disgustingly expensive! ) Mount! A set of 354mm Tube Ring's for a 12inch OTA will set you back around $150 PLUS POSTAGE AND PACKAGING!!?? So you're looking at almost $200 for what is essentially just two pieces of cheap steel!!?? And that doesn't even include you having to also buy the Dovetail Bar to connect the rings/OTA to the Mount!!?? That will cost you another $100 plus shipping, so all in, you're looking at paying almost $300 just for a set of Tube Rings and Dovetail Bar!!?? Add in the cost of a half decent 'scope, and a half decent Mount/Tripod and it's minimum $1'400 !!!??? And if you include some decent eyepieces, and upgrade to a GoTo Mount, Astroimaging Camera or DSLR Camera etc you're into $3'000+ minimum!!!??? It really annoys me how indefensibly expensive our Hobby is!! Now obviously the prices I quoted could be significantly reduced if you're willing to buy junk with awful optics etc, but that would just put a potential Astronomy/Astrophotographer off too!! So it's a no-win situation!!?? Great Vid Dillan! Thanks! Wes, Liverpool, Uk.

    • @noth606
      @noth606 Před 2 lety +1

      Or do like I did, find an old late '80s/early 90s 4" SCT for $100 with one useless eyepiece, and proceed to breaking your back and never using it. You do get the added bonus of 'legit' watching astronomy vids and occasionally commenting.

    • @wesleydonnelly2141
      @wesleydonnelly2141 Před 2 lety

      @@noth606 LOL I totally sympathise with you! I bought an old second hand 80's 3 inch refractor from a car boot sale, and it's optics were awful!! LOL. Thankfully I was advised by a seasoned amateur astronomer that it was telescope that was at fault, not the night sky! I now own a few v good 'scopes, one of which is my most used, the skywatcher 200P on a Skywatcher HEQ5 mount. I adore this hobby now! Wes.

  • @johnbrewer318
    @johnbrewer318 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm new to astronomy without a telescope just using a basic tracking mount and an SLR and do find a planisphere useful for star hopping :)

  • @martinhiggins9814
    @martinhiggins9814 Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Dylan, just wanted to give a huge thanks. I've beeen flat out in bed due to dire back problem for the last six weeks (so no observing whatsoever) so a great opportunity to bone up on astronomy stuff. Been through all your vids (as well as much else on the web), learnt to use Sharpcap, Registax and Autostakker having the ZWO plugged into laptop and focused on a open wardrobe while I tease the image of the stuff inside! Now if I can just get some more detail on that tee shirt. Anyhow cheers for all your work it's much appreciated. Having problems with the humorus stuff though as it hurts when I laugh.

  • @frl8031
    @frl8031 Před 3 lety +2

    Feathertouch focusers are awesome. They focus beautifully, they don't have backlash so autofocus is easier, and they don't lose focus any way near as much as a crappy one. Piers are good for allowing a long scope to shoot at steep angles without crashing into the legs

    • @Astrofrank
      @Astrofrank Před 7 měsíci

      Feathertouch focusers also don't have the problem many Crayford focusers have - the drawtube sliding through.

  • @zparagi
    @zparagi Před 3 lety +4

    You have to do a lot of dirty astrophoto tricks before you can achieve anything close to what you get with a blink of an eye on the Moon/planets! :)

    • @earth9258
      @earth9258 Před 3 lety

      Ya that’s what I was thinking about the moon. Not really true about the planets though in my opinion. Stacking is pretty easy and goes a long way in reducing the atmospheres effects

  • @superIuminaI
    @superIuminaI Před 3 lety +30

    Most Useless Astronomy Equipment #1 - An Eyepiece
    Al Nagler:

    • @oz6123
      @oz6123 Před 3 lety

      Somewhere there is a Televue eyepiece graveyard.

  • @cdhouder
    @cdhouder Před 2 lety

    Question about the luminance filter. I had problems focussing my zwoasi224mc + samyang 135mm on the veil nebula. I was told this is because it didnt have a filter on it and the IR wavelenght has a different focuspoint. To overcome this I should buy an UV/IR cut filter (this is the same as a luminence filter, right?). Sooooo now I'm a bit confused haha. Would this filter fix my focusproblems, or is it useless?

  • @boydbrooks5240
    @boydbrooks5240 Před 3 lety +2

    Just bought my first telescope finally today arriving tomorrow from High Point Scientific. A dome would be really nice, though i wanted to mention that myself believe a pier would be very useful for two reasons. You would have more floor space area to get around your dome, and still be able to drop a beer properly without kicking the legs causing the need to do a polar alinement.

  • @tim71pos
    @tim71pos Před 3 lety +17

    My goodness the hatred of eyepieces is certainly an indicator of why he dislikes planispheres. I use computers at home but in the field I want to be dark adapted and so I avoid screens. Planispheres are good for alignment stars and for figuring out which constellations are going to be where so you can plan the night. Considering they only cost a few bucks....they are also useful for some for some daytime tests of computerized go-to and push-to equipment. I remember when I said to an on-line group that I was going to get a Canon to do some imaging and people I had known for years said DON'T DO IT YOU'LL SPEND ANOTHER $30,000 AND LOSE ALL YOUR TIME IMAGE PROCESSING AND IT WON'T BE FUN ANY MORE. That made an impression. I already had $30k in telescopes. I certainly had no need to spend $30k more. And I spend 40 to 50 hours a week in front of computers and it is not my idea of fun to spend more time behind a screen accumulating data and processing it. Piers: I guess what is meant is fixed piers. ATS piers are lightweight and portable, sort of a cross between tripod and a fixed pier. A viable alternative to a tripod. If I had a big empty field behind my house I might well have a permanent pier. But I don't. So he hates visual astronomy. Now I know why I haven't been paying attention to this guy until youtube suggested I pay a visit.

    • @user-nt9ct1lz9f
      @user-nt9ct1lz9f Před 3 lety +1

      i am totally on your side

    • @henryv1598
      @henryv1598 Před 3 lety +2

      I completely agree here.
      Planispheres are not the best tool, but for beginners, they're definitely useful, and even now and then for more experienced users. The bigger problem here is his lack of appreciation for visual astronomy.
      I'm an astrophotographer myself, but the experience at the eyepiece is totally different. And you shouldn't even touch astrophotography without some experience doing visual observing. Until you know your way around the sky somewhat and have a fundamental understanding of how telescopes work and how to use them, then you shouldn't start imaging. You don't learn to fly a plane by hopping in the cockpit of an F/A-18E and shooting off a catapult. You learn to fly in a light single engine aircraft and work your way up. Jumping directly into imaging misses a lot of amazing experiences.
      And there's nothing at all to rival the experience of looking at a galaxy 50 million light years away or more and realizing the photons hitting your eyes have traveled that far for that long.
      His lack of appreciation for visual observing and the way he publicly derided it here is a massive disservice to the community.
      But I totally agree with him about power bricks. I totally hate them with a burning passion. Someday I'll put a 12V power supply in my observatory and run everything off one supply instead of a half dozen individual ones. Ugh.

    • @petejones6827
      @petejones6827 Před 5 měsíci

      @@henryv1598 this dude told me my dust cap over my 10 inch dob is pointless im new to this but im pretty sure keeping dust off that mirror is something i would want. and the dustcap on my eyepiece well i leave the 25mm on there and id rather not have to wipe the lens all the time hoping i dont scratch it.

  • @astroblast9352
    @astroblast9352 Před 3 lety +3

    Obviously you have never looked through a 30 inch dob in a dark sky. I was expecting something like color filters, moon filters, bird jones telescopes, etc

  • @JimHendrickson
    @JimHendrickson Před 3 lety +2

    The best part of the video is when you tell people to unsubscribe--a definite dig to those who beg their viewers to subscribe on EVERY video. I don't know why that's a thing.
    Allen keys is the only item we have in common. Anyone who owns or uses enough astro gear has a metric and english set of allen keys already.
    My list of most useless astro gear includes:
    * Tripod spreaders - most get in the way and usually have to be removed in order for you to fold up the tripod completely. Honestly, I'd rather have a pier.
    * Eyepiece racks (goes along with tripod spreaders) - because my eyepieces aren't wet enough, I'll just leave them exposed to dew.
    * Dew shields and dew heaters - a dew shield is just a big radiator to cool your optics just as quickly as without, and heater straps never stay attached properly. Surely there's got to be a better way - reflective metallic scope tubes perhaps (did those antique brass telescopes ever dew up?
    * Cigarette lighter plugs with flimsy cables - why is this still the standard 12v power connector?
    * Lens caps - what is the hard thing about making a lens cap that stays on your scope or camera lens so it doesn't pop off when you're handling it or taking it out of its case?
    * "Zero power" finders - perhaps it's just me, but light amplification and a little bit of magnification actually helps me "find" things.
    * Red headlamps - unless you astronomize alone, leave this junk at home.

  • @warrenwhubner7233
    @warrenwhubner7233 Před 3 lety

    Hello Dylan Just wondering what your thoughts are on H(b) filters for both visual and imaging I recently purchased an older C11PEC with an Argo Navis system and also a LX200 8" ACF that included a Atik 314L and Atik 5 filter manual filter wheel that has a CLS CCD and Baader IR filter in it plus dark red dark blue and a yellow green coloured cheap generic rubbish filters that need to be thrown away so I'm just considering what may be worth my while buying Cheers

  • @toddnoseworthy1447
    @toddnoseworthy1447 Před 3 lety +3

    Most of the list I would agree with but I do have two exceptions. One - eyepieces are great for large visual telescopes like Dobsonians, there are big beautiful objects that can be seen with that combination, two - piers, they allow you to run your scope's guiding system closer to the meridian without the worry of striking your tripod. I hope these two points offend you. Lol.

  • @astrosheepy3906
    @astrosheepy3906 Před 3 lety +2

    I know astrophotography is awesome and I love it it lets us see the universe like we can’t see it with the naked eye. But do you never look at the moon or the planets anymore with your eyepiece? Because seeing something with your own eye is still super cool. even if a deepsky object is just a gray vague smudge i find it still super cool that I’m looking at a nebula/galaxy/... that is light years away with my own eyes.

  • @MikeLikesChannel
    @MikeLikesChannel Před 3 lety +2

    There's a single dude in my astro club with an entire dating strategy of showing his new lady friends Jupiter/Saturn/Moon through the eyepiece - most often they've never looked through an eyepiece before - it's like a bolt of lightning to the face. Don't *always* need to use a camera ;)

  • @stevenwarner9156
    @stevenwarner9156 Před 3 lety

    I can see the utility in piers if space is at a premium on the ground, and you don't ever need to transport your 'scope anywhere, but if your tripod does the job, you are sorted. Don't succumb to pier pressure. Looking forward to when I can get into astrophotography. Need to save a bit. Will be nice to hike in early Spring or late Autumn at a national park here in Norway. Got a total setup listed, but need a new 'scope (Skywatcher 72 ED Pro should do), the new StarAdventurer 2i Pro pack, a guide scope setup, and a DSLR, possibly a Canon M50. Autoguiding will still be limited, but will help. Learning to manually move the telescope's position ever so slightly for each exposure for dithering purposes should be interesting... Anyway, great content Dylan. You always find a way to make me grin!

  • @GoldSrc_
    @GoldSrc_ Před 3 lety +3

    lol.
    Those astro cameras need to up their dynamic range game if they want to compete with my squishy eyeball though.
    Also, dust caps can be used to collimate newtonians by drilling a hole in the middle, so they do have some use but not so much as dust caps.

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +1

      the dynamic range is a lie perpetuated by your brain! ;)

  • @zubuyerkaolin
    @zubuyerkaolin Před 3 lety +4

    Yes, we are the hoarders of useless things hoping one day they will come in some kind of use. If they were totally useless then Dylan would have thrown them away. He even kept the eyepiece ;) I'll be honest, I kind of knew I wanted to get into astrophotography, yet I bought a zoom eyepiece so I could show people the moon and stuff. Never really use it for myself though. But I don't plan on throwing it away at all. I do feel like I should have a visual setup next to my photography rig just to spend the imaging time under the stars, break two bottles with one stone ;)

  • @2001johngalt
    @2001johngalt Před 3 lety

    I enjoy your videos and find them very helpful. Do you have any offensive opinions about the Stellina and eVscope electronic telescopes? Any comments about asteroid observing with these scopes?

  • @Desertskyobservatoy1925

    Thanks Dylan for reminding us of the crap that many of us have that gathers dust on a shelf or in a bag. I'll admit that I do love my Feather Touch Focuser, yet I thought I was an odd one in astronomy for giving up eyepieces a few years ago....only used them for a few months and couldn't see squat. I love going out and setting up my CPC-800 with Hyperstar capturing and viewing the beautiful images caught on my screen in seconds!

  • @sjbastro
    @sjbastro Před 3 lety +5

    Never been offended by your videos, right up until you mentioned eyepieces!!! Grr, sketching is better than astrophotography anytime!!! 😉😂. Seriously though, nice video and I can relate to many of those. I'll be trying the clothes peg one for sure 😃👍

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +1

      Hehe thx Steven. I’ll roast sketchers later ;)

    • @sjbastro
      @sjbastro Před 3 lety

      @@DylanODonnell Excellent - I wouldn't want to be missed out 😉👍

  • @Caedo12
    @Caedo12 Před 3 lety +10

    Me: God I love this channel
    Dylan: Yeah, about "God"... LOL

  • @catchingphotons
    @catchingphotons Před 3 lety

    You really made me laugh :-D
    It's also a cool video for beginners!! There are those 10^20 people out there telling you what YOU REALLY NEED TO BUY! And havin a good sense of whats really necessary (a good camera) and whats not (eyepieces) is very helpfull, I think.
    Clear skies my fried!
    -Chris

  • @AmritP
    @AmritP Před 3 lety +1

    Hahahaha that dig at visual astronomy at the end 🤣

  • @jvrotter
    @jvrotter Před 3 lety +3

    Actually I’ve got 4 piers, 2 at home and 2 at my dark site. All my tripods are useless and collecting dust. Covered in large plastic bags of course!
    I still have my original star wheel when I was a kid 60yrs ago. Even though I use SkySafari, still think the star wheel is good learning tool for the youngsters.

  • @josephdragan7734
    @josephdragan7734 Před 3 lety +2

    How about buying full set of eyepieces (accessory kits) for those of us (stubborn luddites) who still love the thought of photons flying through space traveling into our eyes?

  • @JoeBob79569
    @JoeBob79569 Před rokem +2

    I actually found the little booklet I got with my old Soligor telescope to be quite useful, because it had item numbers for some of the extras, like the polar scope, and RA motor, so that I could go and buy them.
    Except when I went to the Soligor website, after only 20 years, it was no longer in use.
    So, yea, I guess it wasn't so useful after all.

  • @cdh79
    @cdh79 Před 2 lety +2

    I do mostly visual astronomy.. I look at my scope inside the house, collecting dust because of the constant bad circumstances in the Netherlands (almost no astronomical darkness for half of the year, constant bad weather, light pollution, wind and low altitude so always bad seeing)

  • @angrysnowmanz
    @angrysnowmanz Před 3 lety +4

    I'm offended that guys hand isn't smoking from holding the soldering iron like that.

  • @ranjitgovindaraj
    @ranjitgovindaraj Před 3 lety +3

    Agree with everything ... But the pier... My mount tripod legs hit the counterweight at 11°N latitude so I got a pier extension and eventually built a simple pier with a rolling shed ... Have to say life’s much easier...

  • @orionm4254
    @orionm4254 Před 3 lety +2

    Some like to simply gaze with binoculars, others go expensive 9k-20k to capture highly detailed frames.

  • @AstroQuest1
    @AstroQuest1 Před 3 lety +2

    Another 'unique' video Dylan. I have a concrete pier in my shed but you are absolutely right - they are over-rated. I never thought of just not using a luminosity filter. Mine came with the set so and a still have an open slot so maybe I will try imaging with no filter next time. Thanks for the useless info. - Cheers

  • @DenimSuitPhoto
    @DenimSuitPhoto Před 3 lety +3

    Visual astronomers. Ya Burned!

  • @LoneWolf-sh1ph
    @LoneWolf-sh1ph Před 3 lety +6

    I wasn't offended but I did nearly 💩 myself at the end when the sound nearly blew my eardrums!!

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +2

      Oops haha

    • @ClearAmbientSkies
      @ClearAmbientSkies Před 3 lety +5

      Sound should never exceed -12db in a production. An audio engineer told me this long ago. Still applies today and can be set in Final Cut or Premiere easily.

  • @Astrobloke
    @Astrobloke Před 3 lety +1

    Execellent work Dillon, I am sure many won’t get your humour. I will point out one small advantage of a pier. If like me you are prone to kicking and tripping in the dark the tripod is a disaster. One night I had to re PA 4 times. Now i have a pier i just hurt my foot 👍

  • @nitailevi8001
    @nitailevi8001 Před 3 lety

    A bit off topic... but I'm looking for one of your videos, I only remember it had a sort of sped up (or time lapse) of cleaning the observatory. Do you know which one it is? I watched it in the last few weeks... but can't remember when it's from even.

  • @lalitac
    @lalitac Před 3 lety +3

    3rd! I have the same haircut as you Dylan! Lots and lots of love from India!

  • @harmannmultani6305
    @harmannmultani6305 Před 3 lety +3

    Dylan after showing the number 1 equipment, destroyed my whole career

  • @theinterstellarfeller
    @theinterstellarfeller Před 3 lety +1

    I feel both seen and attacked by this video. 😂 great job!

  • @Jason-qt8bm
    @Jason-qt8bm Před 3 lety +1

    I keep my dustcovers so I can cap off my beer in the summer and not worry about a wasp seeking refugee in my drink

  • @thesnitch7
    @thesnitch7 Před 3 lety +3

    I love a bit of pier pressure in the morning

  • @justinhendrickson3133
    @justinhendrickson3133 Před 3 lety +3

    GET OFF MY LAWN! lol

  • @BBROPHOTO
    @BBROPHOTO Před 3 lety +1

    'we don't need to cut down trees to look at stars' - preach it!
    The first 20 seconds had me loling too 😂 and I can't wait to see #1 anger people and see this video posted in astronomy groups 😂

  • @gavin5326
    @gavin5326 Před 3 lety +1

    I built my pier for super cheap because it is mainly a piece of a small wind turbine and concrete. It was super fun to build and took my mind off the clouds. I completely understand your argument though:)

  • @alanhat26
    @alanhat26 Před 3 lety +5

    After going through the comments I'm offended that everyone has has said what I wanted to say already 🤣

  • @jonathanhansen3709
    @jonathanhansen3709 Před 2 lety +6

    Everyone has the right to be wrong. Having been in the hobby for 56 years since I was 11, I’ve seen a lot of change in amateur astronomy, in both visual, and imaging. I would classify you as a ‘gadgeteer’, which is fine, you can have a lot of fun fiddling with your latest camera, doodad, or software system. I gave up on astrophotography in the film days of the 1970’s, when a wise man told me, “I can buy a better picture than I can take”. Today I would say I can find a better picture on line than I can take. Any NGC or IC object, get it for free, and without the extra cost, of an expensive camera, and mount. Even the several expensive TeleVue eyepieces I have in my collection are far cheaper than a good ccd camera, or ‘go-to’ mount like you need. And I dare say I have just as much fun! Oh, and I still use paper charts like Sky Atlas 2000 and Uranometria. I find I can access them much faster than any digital program, plus be able to modify them, and easily make permanent notes to myself.

    • @NightSkySurferAstro
      @NightSkySurferAstro Před 7 měsíci

      NO ONE GETS INTO ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY just to have pictures of celestial objects. it's to have pictures THEY THEMSELVES took and processed.

  • @peterpocock9062
    @peterpocock9062 Před 2 lety

    Love your 10 pet peeves. I especially agree with your first, I always wondered what heck any of the objects on the picture were, much l less trying to line things up? My go to is my phone with an app to show me where things are. Now that is very cool!
    I like your last suggestion too. I will eventually get a cam for the eyepiece holder and get the image on to a laptop!

  • @rvoykin
    @rvoykin Před 3 lety

    Carrying around a star chart is like carrying around a scratch piece of paper and pencil so you can do math when you have a phone with a calculator in the same pocket

  • @justinelliott4127
    @justinelliott4127 Před 3 lety +4

    Lol this guy and his CMOS. We do straight rod and cone jack-in jobs here. None of that cheap Chinese well-depth BS. Here, stick this in your neck, were going to Triton.

  • @MobilMobil-kv5ke
    @MobilMobil-kv5ke Před 3 lety +3

    Trigger warning:
    Clothes peg?????
    Here in the US they’re called “clothes pins”.

    • @BuzzLightyear9999
      @BuzzLightyear9999 Před 3 lety +3

      ....yeah, but you guys also don’t know how to say “aluminium”, or “solder”, or “autumn”...🤷‍♂️😉

    • @DylanODonnell
      @DylanODonnell  Před 3 lety +4

      Imperial measurement. Your argument is invalid ;)

    • @thesnitch7
      @thesnitch7 Před 3 lety

      @@BuzzLightyear9999 sawwwwwwwwww drrrrrrrrrr

    • @birreboi
      @birreboi Před 3 lety

      @@BuzzLightyear9999 Or tomatoes, bananas and many other words they strangle ;-)

    • @majestikkal8603
      @majestikkal8603 Před 3 lety

      @@DylanODonnell Oooooo...BUURRRNNN! Lmao 😂

  • @RaysAstrophotography
    @RaysAstrophotography Před 3 lety +1

    I agree with everything you said except dust caps Dylan. I always felt like I needed more. Love your videos!

  • @Bonspieler
    @Bonspieler Před 3 lety +1

    Totally agree with all of it. But yeah, your last one hit home. Spent over a grand on EP's and they haven't been out of their case in 4 years. Come to think of it, I've got a few guitars that haven't been out of their cases for a few years. Yard Sale! Thanks for the vids!

  • @ronhunt2477
    @ronhunt2477 Před 3 lety +4

    Dylan - I'm offended - I just can't remember why! Oh yeah and CABLES that are too short to reach anything!!!!! I'm depressed that didn't make your list!

    • @lancewilliams8732
      @lancewilliams8732 Před 3 lety

      Totally agree, so many damn cables

    • @z4zuse
      @z4zuse Před 3 lety

      Probably did make the short list

    • @VincentGroenewold
      @VincentGroenewold Před 3 lety

      What about little metal spacers that cost 50 dollars each! hahaha

    • @mycarolinaskies
      @mycarolinaskies Před 3 lety

      Now it's cables that are either too short or too long

  • @nicklloyd9165
    @nicklloyd9165 Před 3 lety +7

    Love this video as it confirms my happiness of not being a millennial.

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety

      Spoken like a Gen X-er. Am I right?

  • @AstroDenny
    @AstroDenny Před 3 lety +1

    Hey Dylan- So I am one of the guys pitching a pier at you but if you don't need the space and your scope isn't long enough to hit the tripod legs then you're right. No need for one. I do disagree with the lum filter though. They're pretty important for a lot of broad band targets and shooting without one can cause some bloat. One really cool trick I picked up here is the clothes pin on your SCT focuser. I watched this at 6am my time drinking my first cup of coffee and rushed downstairs to try and it's awesome. Seriously- How did I not think of that?? The instruction thing really annoys me though. I'm a guy that keeps them in a bag because I'm sick of people not wanting to buy used gear without one! Seriously. We have the internet for that shit!
    Fun video! Clear skies to you.

  • @BBROPHOTO
    @BBROPHOTO Před 3 lety +2

    The whole feather touch thing is what us videographers had down ages back. There's a hack someone found using a $5 jam jar opener as a follow focus. The joke is it was terrible as a jam jar opener but amazing as a follow focus 😂 The difference here is that film guys were happy to find hacks that do the same thing as a $1K thing

  • @jeffreypicard6022
    @jeffreypicard6022 Před 3 lety +3

    Do I have to sign up on a list to be offended? I want what's coming to me!!

  • @ivanhancock
    @ivanhancock Před 3 lety +9

    Well, Dylan, here I sit Un-Offended, I'd have to agree with all of that 100% Actually the only thing that pisses me off is clouds as specially months of clouds !! Cheers :)

  • @cyc996863
    @cyc996863 Před 3 lety +2

    not exactly to #9. pier is thin and equipments won't hit the leg especially passing meridian while tripod legs are widely spreaded and equipments like counterweight could hit tripod legs much easier

  • @NatarajanGanesan
    @NatarajanGanesan Před 3 lety +2

    Eyepieces? really! I knew you saved that for the last. While many may love astrophotography, the joy of watching with your plain ol' eyes is just different.
    Star Charts are a relic BUT great to have too ... in case your smartphone starts behaving (which THEY DO :D). Same for instruction manual

  • @billmurphypenguins3774
    @billmurphypenguins3774 Před 3 lety +3

    Totally agree, after about three visual sessions i bought a DSLR. Its still snowballing.....

  • @realtruth2875
    @realtruth2875 Před 3 lety +4

    very bold video. i agree with all points except last, eye peice. visual observation is the first thing , which attracts you toward astronomy. astrophotography pictures are already available on internet.

    • @dovthiessen
      @dovthiessen Před 6 měsíci

      Totally agree. There are many amazing photographers out there, and I do admire their shots. I’d rather observe and explore.

  • @edchimney4279
    @edchimney4279 Před 3 lety

    Hi Do you use vibration dampers on your tripod?

  • @illinoisdarkskystarparty2812

    Agree with everything except the hex key thing. I love those hex headed bolts because they don't strip like a Phillips head screw, and they fit into places that a standard bolt wouldn't fit. The only alternative, I think, is a torx headed bolt--but then I gotta buy a set of torx drivers! Also, when a manufacturer provides you with a hex key, it's harmless fun to watch your collection grow.
    As for piers, I would think they are most useful if you have a permanent observatory. I'll let you know if I ever get one.

  • @Gnarlys_Garage
    @Gnarlys_Garage Před 3 lety +1

    Me for the first 9: “still hasn’t offended me!”
    Dillon: “#1, eye pieces”
    Me: *waiting for Amazon to deliver the 3 eyepieces I just ordered*

  • @jimangela4589
    @jimangela4589 Před rokem

    I agree on the eyepieces. With a camera I can throw an image live or single shot onto a computer screen that everyone can see. No squinting, no waiting in line, no bumping the telescope.

  • @edwarddewolf3392
    @edwarddewolf3392 Před 3 lety +1

    Just the intro deserved my like ! So happy #1 was NOT the boring 'the telescope that is never used' .... although true, it would not have fit Dylan's ... style :-)