>From the start I will admit that I did not purchase this for visual satellite observation. But after my first impressions, I have a feeling it is going to become a regular at my sessions. I got a Gen 1 night vision scope for $300. I bought it mostly to view wildlife at night. At first I was thinking I would want the higher quality images of a Gen 2 ($800 extra!), but after settling for the Gen 1, I can see that it far exceeds my expectations. Then, I had a most pleasant surprise as I turned it towards the sky. The view was unbelievable! I have some light pollution, plus the moon was quite intense, but through the monocular fainter stars became visible. The handle of the little dipper for instance, normally hard to see here, became quite evident. Unexpectedly, I spotted a satellite. I attempted again and again to see the bird with just my eyes, but without success. The night vision made viewing it very easy. So why should you pull out a night vision scope when you have a nice pair of binoculars? With the unit I have, the answer is the much greater field of vision. Although the magnification is billed as 3.5X, I believe it is much less, and the amount of sky visible in the view is fantastic. A word of caution, however: the star images are not as crisp and clear as through binoculars. And especially towards the edge of the field, the image becomes quite blurry. But for purposes of acquisition of a less-than-ideal prediction, a blurry moving point at the edge still works. After centering, the image of the sat amongst the stars is excellent. I have not taken the time yet to perform more specific experiments regarding the exact decrease in magnitude that can be obtained visually nor to discern the actual field of view attained in the sky. My particular unit is call the "Night Storm" made by "AMTc". I believe there are several mail-order catalogs that sell their products; mostly camping, boating, and hunting suppliers. I did try a different unit that came from a company in Cleveland called Newcon Optics. I returned that scope to the retailer after finding the image intensifier tube to be of vastly inferior quality. By the way, most Gen 1 night vision scopes are imported from Russia or Ukraine. Does anyone else have any experience using night vision for satellite viewing? --- Judy _~O __O Judy May tandembike@worldnet.att.net _-\<,_-\<,_ (*)/---|/-(*) Life is a journey ... Enjoy the ride! ----------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe from SeeSat-L by sending a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@lists.satellite.eu.org http://www.satellite.eu.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Oct 04 2001 - 11:20:44 EDT