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NEWS BLOG by Sean Walker
An Astro-Blast at NEAF 2010
S&T: Sean Walker
David Nagler, Paul Dellechiaie, and Al Nagler introduce the 3.7-mm Ethos-SX 110° eyepiece.
S&T: Dennis di Cicco
Orion Telescope & Binoculars' new 36-inch Monster Dobsonian Telescope.
S&T: Sean Walker
On the other end of the affordability scale, a lot of people seemed to be mulling over Orion's assaults on the $100 barrier: a 100-mm (4-inch) f/4 tabletop reflector with a paraboloidal mirror, two eyepieces, and red-dot finder, and an 80-mm f/4.3 refractor on the same mini-Dob mount, also with two eyepieces and red-dot finder. Both retail for $99.95 and weigh an easily-tossed-in-the-back-seat 6 pounds.
For the discerning astrophotographer, a number of premium imaging scopes made their debut at NEAF, including new offerings from PlaneWave Instruments, Deep Sky Instruments, Starizona, Takahashi, and Vixen. Meade Instruments used the opportunity to reintroduce its flagship instrument the MaxMount 20, a 20-inch (0.5-m) ACF catadioptric reflector optimized for imaging combined with a heavy-duty equatorial mount.
Joseph Haberman shows off PlaneWave Instruments' new 24-inch CDK telescope on a Mathis Instruments MI-1000 heavy-duty fork mount.
S&T: Sean Walker
Some unexpected excitement happened Sunday afternoon. Four nights earlier, a brilliant fireball over Wisconsin had lit up the landscape for hundreds of miles around, making news across the Upper Midwest. The incoming object may have weighed about one ton; meteorite hunters immediately began racing to locate fragments. One of the meteorite dealers at NEAF announced over the PA system that a meteorite from the fall had just been brought from Wisconsin to their booth, and people crowded around to see an object so fresh from space.
While NEAF is primarily about the tools of the trade, the show also includes a full program of lectures. This year's keynote speaker was Alex Filippenko of the University of California, Berkeley, who gave a captivating presentation on supernovae. Steve Arnold and Geoff Notkin of the Science Channel's "Meteorite Men" show were on hand — Arnold was the one who showed up with the Wisconsin meteor fragments. Good catch, Steve!
Check out our extended coverage of the show — including the Northeast Astro Imaging Conference (NEAIC) that preceded the show — in Sky & Telescope's August issue.
Posted by Sean Walker, April 20, 2010
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all comments (3 total)
Videos
Posted by MySchizoBuddy
April 20, 2010 At 10:25 PM PDT
When will you post the videos of new products at NEAF?
NEAF
Posted by WLR
April 23, 2010 At 02:08 PM PDT
Haven't been able to get there for 5 years....came home with a stoney chondrite. :-)
Stoney Chondrite
Posted by Marc
May 21, 2010 At 07:15 AM PDT
Can't you get cream for that?
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comments (3)