Celestron Motor AstroMaster/PowerSeeker
£31,60
You will receive your order within 5 - 6 days if you do it from Monday to Friday before 18 pmView options
Celestron Motor AstroMaster/PowerSeeker
A ñ ade right-back trace capabilities (RA) to any equatorial telescope Celestron AstroMaster or PowerSeeker, or to any installation &oatons that use an equatorial mount Celestron CG-2 or CG-3. This AR engine, which is easy to install, makes it possible to compensate for the rotation of the Earth, so the telescope follows the movement of a star to bring the night sky from east to west. When the telescope mount is correctly aligned with the polarity and the RA engine is coupled and in operation, the user needs to make occasional adjustments in the decline (Dec) to keep an object in the eye for long periods of time.
The Celestron single-axis engine works with a 9V battery í so there are no cables that stand in the way. The drive can be used in both the northern and southern hemisphere. To change the hemisphere (invert the direction of the engine), simply turn the North/South switch (N/S) on the engine face. Also, it is easy to change the speed of the engine. A "Speed Regulator" knob is located just below the power indicator, and can be rotated in any direction to decrease or accelerate the engine. Since the objects of the solar system, such as the Sun and the Moon, move around the sky at different speeds to those of deep-sky objects, this gives you the possibility to adjust the speed of the engine to the particular type of object that you are observing.
Character íres:
- Install this engine on your AstroMaster or PowerSeeker telescope mounted on the equator and start tracking the stars!
- The follow-up to the Acensi &oatóna Recta compensates for the rotation of the Earth.
- It can be used in the northern or southern hemisphere.
- For the equatorial mounts Celestron CG-2 and CG-3.
- Since the objects of the solar system move through the sky at different speeds, this gives you the ability to adjust the engine speed to the particular type of object that you are watching.