Amateur Telescope making

A Computerized 6" Dobsonian Telescope (revised version)

Observatory Telescope

Also visit: A PCB for Mel Bartels' AltAz Dob Drive system , a rotating Piggyback mount for the computerized Dob and my Astrophotography page

This page contains the changes I made to my setup after building a new mount for my 6" Newtonian telescope in 2000.

Mechanical setup:

Azimuth drive:
Baseboard The groundboard is a 20mm thick plywood circle with a diameter of 50 cm. It is attached with 4 screws to the concrete pillar of the observatory.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Azimuth drive The RS-components 1:250 gear-reducer and the 4.1V /1.1A 6-lead Nema 23 stepper motor are mounted directly to the ground board.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Ball bearing The two 32mm ball-bearings, attached to the groundboard via 10mm shafting, and the drive wheel form an equilateral triangle.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Altitude drive I initially used a rubber friction drive wheel for both azimuth and altitude drives, but replaced those with steel ones as the rubber wheels introduced unpredictable PE.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Altitude drive:
Altitude drive For the altitude drive I replaced one original 20 cm trunion with a 40cm plywood disk rimmed with aluminum.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Altitude drive The motor and gearbox are attached to the rocker with a plywood bracket. I sandwiched thin strips of foam between the bracket and the mount to avoid the transmission of vibrations.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Tensor Since the tube assembly is relatively light, I need to artificially tense the altitude trunion and the altitude drive wheel. For that purpose I installed a chain and spring tensioner. That simple device avoids slippage between the two drive wheels.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)
Distance holder Distance holder detail Distance holder 3 Following an advice found on Chuck Shaw's excellent page , I installed a device to always keep the tube centered between the sides of the rocker. It consists of two small ball bearingsmounted at right angle to the altitude axis. To support the bearings on the rocker I drilled vertical holes in the rocker, mounted the bearings on screws and wrapped teflon tape around the screw to achieve tight fit to the hole.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)

The computer:

Computer I use my old 386SX Laptop equipped with a 387SX (donated by Jim Burrows) mathematical coprocessor. The display is covered with red filter. The computer has no CD-Rom drive, but I installed a partial version of GUIDE on the 40 MB harddisk, as described in the GUIDE FAQ available on the Project Pluto home page .
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)

Configuration of the system:

Motor PEC dial Motordial To adjust the microsteps I glued a dial to the back of the motors. That made it much easier to identify which steps are to wide or to short. The same dial also provides a PEC mark to synchronize the motors precisely. Due to the high power consumption of my motors and low computing power of my Laptop, I need to use PWM values of 38 downwards. Therefore I do not get a microstep resolution as fine as I would like to, but thanks to my very small microstep size on both axis (~1.3 arcsecond/microstep) tracking is still very smooth. Since I run the system without batteries, I can afford a higher power consumption than a field user. For slewing and tracking my motors consume about 0.2 Amp each.
(Click on the small icon to see larger image)

This page has been visited times

Sign Guestbook
View Guestbook

Back to Homepage

Yahoo
© 1996 Contact Berthold Hamburger
1