Setting up and using the equatorial mount – Orion ASTROVIEW 9822 User Manual

Page 5

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6. Position the telescope in the mounting rings so it remains

horizontal when you carefully let go with both hands. This
is the balance point for the optical tube with respect to the
Dec. axis. (Figure 4d)

7. Retighten the tube ring clamps.
The telescope is now balanced on both axes. When you loos-
en the lock lever on one or both axes and manually point the
telescope, it should move without resistance and should not
drift from where you point it.

6. setting up and using the

Equatorial Mount

When you look at the night sky, you no doubt have noticed
that the stars appear to move slowly from east to west over
time. That apparent motion is caused by the Earth’s rotation
(from west to east). An equatorial mount (Figure 5) is designed
to compensate for that motion, allowing you to easily “track”
the movement of astronomical objects, thereby keeping them

Figure 4a, b, c, d.

Proper operation of the equatorial mount requires that the telescope tube be balanced on both the R.A. and Dec. axes.

(a) With the R.A. lock lever released, slide the counterweight along the counterweight shaft until it just counterbalances the tube. (b) When
you let go with both hands, the tube should not drift up or down. (c) With the Dec. lock lever released, loosen the tube ting clamps a few turns
and slide the telescope forward or back in the tube rings. (d) when the tube is balanced about the Dec. axis, it will not move when you let go.

Figure 4a

Figure 4b

Figure 4c

Figure 4d

Figure 5.

The AstroView equatorial mount (with attached telescope tube).

Declination

setting circle

Declination lock lever

Front opening in R.A.

axis

Latitude scale

Latitude adjustment

T-bolts

Azimuth fine

adjustment knobs

Declination

axis

Right

Ascension

axis

Right Ascension

setting circle lock

thumb screw

Right Ascension setting circle

Polar axis finder scope

Right Ascension lock lever

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