beautypg.com

Orion STARBLAST 6 9964 User Manual

Page 11

background image

11

Now tighten the three small alignment screws equally to
secure the secondary mirror in that position.
If the entire primary mirror reflection is not visible in the sec-
ondary mirror, as in Figure 10c; you will need to adjust the
tilt of the secondary mirror. This is done by alternately loos-
ening one of the three alignment set screws while tightening
the other two, as depicted in Figure 12. The goal is to center
the primary mirror reflection in the secondary mirror, as in
Figure 10d. Don’t worry that the reflection of the secondary
mirror (the smallest circle, with the collimation cap “dot” in
the center) is off-center. You will fix that in the next step.

aligning the Primary Mirror
The final adjustment is made to the primary mirror. It will
need adjustment if, as in Figure 10d, the secondary mir-
ror is centered under the focuser and the reflection of the
primary mirror is centered in the secondary mirror, but the
small reflection of the secondary mirror (with the “dot” of the
collimation cap) is off-center.

The tilt of the primary mirror is adjusted with three spring-
loaded collimation thumbscrews on the back end of the
optical tube (bottom of the primary mirror cell); these are the
wide thumbscrews. The other three thin thumbscrews lock
the mirror’s position in place; these thin thumbscrews must
be loosened before any collimation adjustments can be
made to the primary mirror.
To start, turn the thin thumbscrews that lock the primary mir-
ror in place counterclockwise a few turns each (Figure 13).

Now try tightening or loosening one of the wide collimation
thumbscrews with your fingers (Figure 14). Look into the fo-
cuser and see if the secondary mirror reflection has moved
closer to the center of the primary. You can tell this easily
with the collimation cap and mirror center mark by simply
watching to see if the “dot” of the collimation cap is moving
closer or further away from being centered in the “ring” of
the primary mirror mark. When you have the dot centered
as much as is possible in the ring, your primary mirror is col-
limated. The view through the collimation cap should resem-
ble Figure 10e. Re-tighten the thin locking thumbscrews.
A simple star test will tell you whether the optics are accu-
rately collimated.

Figure 11.

To center the secondary mirror under the focuser, hold

the secondary mirror holder in place with your fingers while adjusting
the center screw with a Phillips head screwdriver. Do not touch the
mirror’s surface.

Figure 12.

Adjust the tilt of the secondary mirror by loosening or

tightening the three alignment set-screws with a 2mm hex key.

Figure 13.

The three thin thumbscrews that lock the primary

mirror in place must first be loosened before any adjustments can
be made.

Figure 14.

The tilt of the primary mirror is adjusted by turning one

or more of the three wide collimation thumbscrews.

Alignment set screws (3)