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Photography Forums => The Canon EOS Forum => Topic started by: klindup on December 28, 2008, 11:47:07 AM



Title: Telescopes as long focus lenses
Post by: klindup on December 28, 2008, 11:47:07 AM
I have just purchased a 40D.  Another hobby is astronomy and I own a Teleview NP101 telescope.  It is a four element 540mm f5.4 and I would like to use it on the camera as a long focus lens for photographing birds and wild life.  Does anyone have experiece of using a refracting telescopes as long focus lenses?  Optically it is very high quality with a flat field and not chromatic aberration.  It has to be used on a tripod and is manual focus.  How does it compare with a Canon lens of equivalent focal length?  Any advice would be appreciated.

Ken


Title: Re: Telescopes as long focus lenses
Post by: Bob Atkins on December 28, 2008, 04:36:21 PM
I have used my TeleVue Genesis (4" refractor, 500mm fl f5) as a telephoto lens and it's as good as any of the long Canon telephoto lenses. The disadvantage is that it's larger and heavier than a 500mm lens, plus it's manual focus only. However the image quality is very high indeed and I used it a lot before I bought a 500mm lens!

All you need is the appropriate "T" adapter, plus you may well need an extension tube which fits into the focuser if you want to use it without the diagonal in order to get the camera at the correct location. You may need a few inches of extension if you want to focus close. Most of the astrophotography components will assume you want to focus at infinity. To focus at 10ft, focus shifts back about 4" compared to infinity. I made my own 2" diameter extension from brass tubing and a modified "T" mount.

BTW for those thinking this may be a "cheap" route to a long lens, it's not. I think the current price of the 101NP is around $3700. It weighs 10lbs and it's 29" long. That's 4lb heavier and over a foot longer (and 2/3 stop slower) than a Canon 500/4.5L.