Developed
by Astro-Tech to make large-format CCD imaging affordable for the
amateur astronomer, the Astro-Tech AT10RC –
a Sky & Telescope Hot Product for
2010
– is priced nearly $4000 less than the formerly least-expensive 10” R-C.
The AT10RC is the first truly affordable large aperture true
Ritchey-Chrétien astrograph available from a U. S. company. Even better,
despite its low price, the Astro-Tech-developed AT10RC still has the
premium features the larger Astro-Tech RCs are known for – quartz
mirrors, dielectric mirror coatings, and more.
After several years of joint
development with the manufacturer, Astro-Tech is proud to announce that
the 10" f/8 AT10RC Ritchey-Chrétien is now in production. The Astro-Tech
AT10RC is the first truly affordable large aperture true
Ritchey-Chrétien astrograph available from a U. S. company. Imitators
will no doubt copy Astro-Tech’s years of hard development work, but why
settle for a copy when you can get the original? Sky & Telescope agrees,
as they named the Astro-Tech AT10RC a Sky & Telescope Hot Product for
2010, along with its smaller 8" brother, the Astro-Tech AT8RC.
(Incidentally, the original Astro-Tech 6" R-C was named a Sky &
Telescope Hot product for 2009.)
The affordable Astro-Tech AT10RC joins two other Astro-Tech
Ritchey-Chrétien firsts. One is the AT8RC, also a Sky & Telescope Hot
Product for 2010 – the first 8" true Ritchey-Chrétien astrograph
available from a U. S. company and the first and still the only
affordable U. S. 8" R-C with Astro-Tech-designed premium features like
quartz mirrors, dielectric mirror coatings, two dovetail mounting rails,
and more. The other is the AT6RC – a highly affordable R-C astrograph
for DSI and DSLR imaging that was conceived and developed by, and first
brought to market by, Astro-Tech and named a Hot Product for 2009. Both
the AT6RC and the AT8RC were highly praised in a four-page review in the
December 2009 issue of Sky & Telescope magazine.
And we are serious when we say the 10" aperture AT10RC is “affordable."
The Astro-Tech AT10RC is priced nearly $4000 less than the formerly
least-expensive 10" R-C. As Sky & Telescope pointed out in their Hot
Product citation in the January 2010 Sky & Telescope, “Ritchey-Chrétien
reflectors are highly regarded among today's elite astrophotographers,
and premium instruments often carry price tags starting at about $1,000
per inch of aperture. So it's the best kind of "sticker shock" to see
the prices for Astro-Tech's 8- and 10-inch /8 Ritchey-Chrétiens, which
pack features too numerous to list here. Our review of the 8-inch scope
appears in last month's issue (December 2009), page 38, and our initial
hands-on look at the 10-inch suggests that it will be equally exciting
for deep sky astrophotographers." The magazine also pointed out that the
AT10RC cost “about one-fourth what similar instruments did just a couple
of years ago."
The
Ritchey-Chrétien optical design is used in virtually every recent large
mega-million dollar professional observatory telescope – including the
Hubble Space Telescope The Astro-Tech AT10RC astrograph (a telescope
designed specifically for photographing comparatively wide areas of the
sky) makes the coma-free imaging of true Ritchey-Chrétien imaging optics
available to the DSLR and large format CCD astrophotographer at a price
less than that of many large format CCD cameras. Featuring first-quality
99% reflectivity dielectric mirror coatings and premium low thermal
expansion quartz mirrors, this economical 10" Astro-Tech R-C makes you
wonder just what competitive high-price R-Cs have that makes them cost
so much more.
Designed for exceptional imaging, the Astro-Tech AT10RC provides the
wide coma-free photographic field that large format CCD
astrophotographers crave, but can’t get from conventional reflectors and
Schmidt-Cassegrains. Likewise, as a pure two-mirror system, the AT10RC
is totally free from the spurious color that affects the imaging of all
but the most costly apochromatic refractors, and it does it with an 10"
aperture that dwarfs the light gathering of most apo refractors.
The AT10RC photos of the Eagle and Trifid Nebulas in the “images of some
features" section below are from AT10RC prototype owner John O’Neill.
They were taken with an SBIG ST-10XME CCD camera and Astrodon filters.
John had this to say about the AT10RC, “Finally got a full data image of
an old favorite, The Trifid Nebula. Total of 1.5 hours of data on a 7
out of 10 night here in Florida. The scope is truly everything I
expected and more. This shot was compared to one taken with a 24" RC
(taken the same night) and you would be hard pressed to tell the
difference. The guy that had the 24" was actually a little miffed that a
$3,000 scope could do as well as his $75,000 scope :>)"
If serious astrophotography is your goal, but the price of most true
Ritchey-Chrétien optics has been keeping you from the optical design
most modern professional observatories and the Hubble Space Telescope
use for their imaging, your wait is over. The 10" S & T Hot Product for
2010 Astro-Tech AT10RC astrograph can bring the world of professional
DSLR/CCD deep space imaging to your backyard observatory at a truly
affordable price.
Features of this Astro-Tech AT10RC Astrograph . . .
·
Optical design: true Ritchey-Chrétien Cassegrain-type two-mirror
optics, with hyperbolic primary and secondary mirrors. For more details,
click on the “optics" icon above. The 300mm available back focus allows
for the use of long CCD equipment trains.
·
Optical specifications: 10" aperture, 2000mm focal length, f/8
focal ratio.
·
Hyperboloid primary mirror: Made of low thermal expansion quartz,
rather than the Pyrex used by competitors. Ground and polished under
precision computer control. Unlike catadioptric designs (SCTs,
Maksutovs, etc.) that move the primary mirror fore and aft in the
optical tube to focus (which can lead to image shift as the mirror
position changes) the AT10RC primary mirror is fixed to eliminate both a
catadioptric’s image shift and the frequent primary mirror collimation
requirements of a Newtonian reflector.
·
Hyperboloid secondary mirror: Made of low thermal expansion
quartz, rather than the Pyrex used by competitors. Ground and polished
under precision computer control. Mounted in a four-vane spider and
fully collimatable using simple standard Cassegrain reflector
collimating techniques. Unlike complicated R-C designs that use motors
to move the secondary mirror fore and aft to focus, the AT10RC secondary
mirror is fixed and focusing is done externally.

The December 2009 issue of Sky & Telescope said that the Astro-Tech
R-C’s fixed primary and secondary mirrors “eliminate image shift, which
has been the bane of Cassegrain scopes with moving-mirror focusing
systems . . . It also keeps the effective focal length of the system
constant, and the infinity focal point remains at a fixed point outside
of the telescope, neither of which is the case with moving-mirror
systems that change the separation between a Cassegrain’s primary and
secondary mirrors."
·
99% reflectivity dielectric coated optics: Both primary and secondary
mirrors have non-tarnishing state-of-the-art multi-layer dielectric
mirror coatings. These have a full 99% reflectivity for the brightest
possible images. This is higher than the unspecified reflectivity (but
typically 94-96% reflectivity) of the enhanced aluminum coatings used by
competitors.
·
Multiple internal light baffles: Computer optimized primary and
secondary baffling. Nine contrast-enhancing glare-stop knife-edge
baffles in the optical tube; multiple glare-stop microbaffles in the
secondary mirror light shield; and baffles in the primary mirror baffle
tube to provide truly dark sky backgrounds during imaging.
·
Dual-speed 3.3" linear bearing Crayford focuser: A newly-designed
extra-sturdy “linear bearing" Crayford focuser is threaded onto the rear
cell of the AT10RC. A locking collar allows the entire precision-made
non-vignetting focuser to be rotated to the most convenient imaging
angle and locked in place. There is 140mm (5.5") of back focus available
with the focuser installed (235mm from the rear cell of the scope,
without focuser, to the focal plane).
The focuser has dual-speed focusing. There are two coarse focusing
knobs. The right knob also has a smaller concentric knob with a 10:1
reduction gear microfine focusing ratio. This provides exceptionally
precise image control during critical imaging. All focus knobs are
ribbed, so they are easy to operate, even while wearing gloves or
mittens in cold weather. A lock knob underneath the focuser lets you
adjust the tension on the drawtube to accommodate varying equipment
loads. A large lock knob on top of the focuser lets you lock in your
photographic focus.
The new linear bearing focuser has a polished stainless steel drive
rail that runs the length of the underside of the drawtube. The
focuser’s stainless steel drive shaft presses on this drive rail to move
the focuser, rather than having the hard steel drive shaft press
directly on (and wear out) the softer aluminum drawtube as with
conventional Crayford focusers. The steel drive rail rides in a
self-lubricating track that extends almost the entire length of the
focuser body. The drive rail and its attached drawtube are thereby
supported over most of their length at all times, rather than by a
conventional Crayford focuser’s two sets of small contact area roller
bearings. This system distributes the drive force evenly over the entire
drawtube, without concentrating it on a few small contact points. The
result is a very rigid drawtube with essentially zero flexure and no
wear (much less flat spots or uneven wear) on the focuser drawtube.
To fine-tune the long 140mm back focus of the AT10RC to the
requirements of your camera and equipment train, three threaded
extension rings (two 1" in length and one 2") are provided to install
singly or in combination between the AT10RC rear cell and the focuser.
These provide a flex-free solid metal extension that changes the
distance between the focuser and the rear cell. This lets you
accommodate the varying back-focus requirements of DSLR-type camera
imaging versus long equipment train CCD imaging. The two 6.4 ounce 1"
extension rings and the 14.4 ounce 2" ring add 1.7 pounds to the weight
of the scope when all rings are installed.
Because of the 34.4 pound weight of the AT10RC (36.1 pounds with all
extension rings in place) , plus the weight of your ancillary camera
equipment and any photoguide scope, installing the AT10RC on a German
equatorial mount with a 60 to 100 pound payload capacity is recommended.
Such mounts include the 90 pound capacity Celestron CGE Pro and the
Losmandy 60 pound capacity G11 or G11 go-to and 100 pound capacity
Losmandy HGM Titan. Other suitable mounts are also available.
·
Focusing scale: The focuser’s 50mm (1.97") travel drawtube has scales
marked in both 1/16th inch and 1mm increments so you can note individual
focuser positions for easy return to the approximate correct focus when
switching between varying photographic equipment combinations.
·
Cooling fans: To allow the AT10RC to reach ambient temperatures more
quickly for optimum imaging performance, there are three small low
vibration/high CFM primary mirror cooling fans built into the rear cell.
The high speed DC fans are powered by a standard equipment battery pack
that plugs into a jack on the rear cell. The battery pack uses eight
user-supplied AA batteries. An optional external DC power supply, such
as a rechargeable 12VDC battery pack can also be used to power the fans.
·
1.25" and 2" compression ring accessory holders: The 3.25" o.d. focuser
drawtube ends in a stepdown to a 2" accessory holder that uses a
non-marring soft brass compression ring to hold 2" imaging accessories
in place. The compression ring won’t scratch the barrel of your
accessories as an ordinary thumbscrew can. Two thumbscrews are provided
to lock the compression ring on your accessories. Also supplied is a
1.25" accessory holder that slips into the 2" compression ring holder to
let you use 1.25" imaging accessories. Like the 2" accessory holder on
the drawtube, the 1.25" adapter also uses a non-marring soft brass
compression ring.
·
Two dovetail mounting rails: Two Losmandy-style “D-plate" dovetail rails
are provided for installing the AT10RC on an equatorial mount, as well
as for mounting optional accessories (such as rings for a photoguide
scope) on top. The 21" long dovetail rails run the length of the optical
tube. One is mounted underneath the tube for installing the 34.4 pound
AT10RC directly on a suitable payload capacity Losmandy-style equatorial
mount. The second dovetail rail is mounted 180° away from the first, on
top of the tube. This can be used for installing a photoguide ring set,
piggyback camera adapter, or any other accessory that attaches to a
scope by means of Losmandy-style “D-plate" dovetail adapters. The
undersides of the dovetails have been hollowed out to lighten their
weight without compromising their strength, as can be seen in the
side-view feature image below.
·
Finderscope dovetail: a Vixen-style finderscope bracket dovetail base is
installed on the upper left side of the optical tube. It can easily be
removed if not needed. It will accept Vixen-style finderscope brackets
as well as red dot-type finders, such as the Astro-Tech #ATF.
·
Other accessories: A snap-in dust cap is standard.
·
Two year warranty: As an expression of the confidence Astronomy
Technologies has in the quality of their products, the Astro-Tech AT10RC
is protected by a two-year limited warranty
against flaws in materials and workmanship.
|
Feaures |
|
2000mm Focal Length |
|
F/8 Focal Ratio |
|
.46 Arc-seconds Resolution |
|
10-inch Aperture |
|
34.4 lbs net-weight |
|
2-year Warranty |
|
Priced at $2695.00 |