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APM Prisme Érecteur 90° - 2"

par APM
UGC APM-2-diag-EI-PR-FL
Prix d'origine $296.00 USD - Prix d'origine $296.00 USD
Prix d'origine
$296.00 USD
$296.00 USD - $296.00 USD
Prix actuel $296.00 USD

Description

Disponibilité:
En rupture de stock
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Plus d'information

Prisme à image droite APM 2 pouces avec revêtement à verrouillage rapide et ultra large bande

Le prisme redresseur est produit par APM-Telescopes avec la plus haute qualité

Ce prisme d'image dressé pour l'observation astronomique offre la plus grande précision pour des grossissements et une luminosité d'image maximum, grâce à la nouvelle compensation ultra-large bande. Il est fabriqué dans la plus haute qualité Astro, le bord du toit est presque invisible. Avec une ouverture libre de 46 mm, il offre également la plus grande ouverture du marché mondial, ce qui signifie que tous les oculaires 2" peuvent être utilisés sans vignettage.
Ce prisme d'image dressé à 90 degrés APM de 2 pouces est de loin supérieur à tout autre prisme d'image dressé, ce qui le rend également adapté aux observateurs de planètes très expérimentés.

Optique

Précision et luminosité d'image maximales grâce au nouveau revêtement ultra large bande.

Mécanique

Le corps stable est fraisé CNC avec précision. L'équipement est sécurisé avec le verrou APM rapide de 2 pouces. Ainsi l'équipement 2 pouces est fixé par un serrage de centrage qui assure un alignement exact sur l'axe optique.

Contenu de la livraison :
  • Prisme d'image droit de 2 pouces avec adaptateur 2"/1,25"






Caractéristiques

Lester:
618g

Caractéristiques

Connexion à l'oculaire :
2"
Enrobage:
Revêtement ultra large bande
Diamètre libre :
46mm
Longueur optique :
113 millimètres


Customer Reviews

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J
Julian Samuel
Solidly built

As a visual amateur astronomer with 4 years experience I’ve heard serious amateur astronomers dismiss zoom eyepieces. Research has shown me that that view changed in 2001 with the arrival of the Tele Vue 2-4mm and 3-6mm Nagler zoom eyepieces. Is there a similar dismissal of Erect-Image prisms diagonals?

I called the director of David Astro to shed more light on the subject. He said:

“the reflectivity of a dielectric mirror diagonal is usually of around 99%. In a prism diagonal, each air-glass interface reduces the light transmission by around 4%. Since there are 2 glass-air interfaces, you've got 2x 4% loss, which means the transmissivity is of the order of 92%. Are you able to detect the difference in brightness between 99% and 92%?”

further elaborating that:

“the transmissivity/reflectivity is not the only thing to take into account when comparing a prism diagonal and a mirror diagonal. Prisms tend to disperse the light which can lead to loss of contrast and false colours in fast scope. I'd say that faster f/6 or f/7, mirror diagonals are the way to go to get the best image. For slower scopes, glass diagonals can produce better images.”

Under Toronto wrecked Bortle 9 skies, I have not at all been able to detect the difference between 99% and 92% brightness. Perhaps more experienced astronomers can see problems with the Erect-Image-prism.

So far, using the German-made APM 2 inch Erect-Image-prism with my William Optics 81mm, f/6.9 has made reading the star maps and maps of the moon more efficient. I did not see any vignetting or false colour in 2” and 1.25” eyepieces that I used for the comparison.

I repeatedly switched back and forth from the William Optics 99% Dielectric Dura Bright Diagonal - 2” to the APM prism. I sensed no loss of light. The Erect-Image diagonal gave views indistinguishable from the dielectric mirror. The bands of Jupiter may have been a teeny weeny bit clearer with the mirror diagonal, but I think this must have been because Jupiter was in a trashy horizon band of light.

In the prism, the major and many of the minor stars in the Pleiades were sharp and beautiful. The William Optics dielectric mirror diagonal showed everything with equal intensity but I liked the colours with prism. The voyage from the Aldebaran to this open cluster was simple, the erect-image easy to use.

The Alpha Persei moving group was clear as was NGC 884 and NGC 869. I used a 13mm APM eyepiece. The colour of stars was even more lovely that with the mirror diagonal.

The prism made looking at the moon with an atlas on the side effective and direct. I used the 3-6mm Nagler zoom: I could see details on the lava flooded crater Fracastorius - at 93x (6mm) and it was detailed even at 186x (3mm).

I’ve yet to see views of more planets and DSOs in a really dark sky.

It weighs about ~700 grams and is solidly built.