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Based on Astronomy magazine’s telescope "report cards," scopes of this size and type generally perform as follows . . .
  |  |  |  |  |  | Terestrial Photography | Lunar Photography | Planetary Photography | Star Cluster, Nebula, and Galaxy Photography |
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| This Celestron CGEM DX 1400HD telescope has:
• 14” EdgeHD high definition aplanatic Schmidt-Cassegrain optics
• newly-upgraded 50 pound payload capacity CGEM DX German equatorial mount
• StarBright XLT optical multicoatings for the highest possible light transmission
• 9 x 50mm finderscope
• 23mm 2” 82° field Axiom eyepiece (170x) and 2” star diagonal
• NexStar go-to computer hand control with 40,000+ object database
• NexRemote software to control the telescope via computer
• 2-year warranty
The Celestron CGEM DX 1400HD telescope puts unique new large aperture 14” aplanatic (free from coma and corrected for spherical aberration) EdgeHD high definition Schmidt optics on a newly-upgraded high-precision Celestron CGEM DX go-to German equatorial mount. The advanced EdgeHD optical design – a Sky & Telescope Hot Product for 2010 – has a dual-element field flattener lens made from premium Schott optical glass mounted in its central baffle tube. The field flattener reduces off-axis coma and produces aberration-free images across a wide 42mm image circle (as large as the diagonal of a 35mm negative or large format CCD chip and ideal for astrophotography).
In addition to reduced off-axis coma, the EdgeHD optical system delivers an astrograph-quality focal plane more than three times flatter than a standard Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope and dramatically flatter than competing coma-free designs. Stars are smaller and more concentrated, creating brighter images and allowing you to see down to a fainter magnitude than other equally-sized telescopes. You see visibly sharp and point-like stars to the very edges of some of the largest CCD and DSLR chips available today.
Celestron’s renowned Starbright XLT multicoatings on every optical surface give you maximum light throughput across the widest possible visual and photographic spectrum. The big aperture CGEM DX 1400HD’s immense light grasp, almost 1600 times that of even the sharpest dark-adapted eye, reveals star clusters, nebulas, planets, and galaxies in amazing visual and photographic detail. The Fastar-compatible optical tube allows imaging down to an incredibly-fast f/2 focal ratio using optional accessories.
The smooth and precise Celestron CGEM DX go-to mount makes finding over 40,000 of those stars and objects easy and automatic. You spend more time looking at celestial objects, and less time looking for them. The newly-upgraded CGEM DX mount combines portability and premium-level performance with a payload capacity of 50 pounds, enough capacity to handle the 45 pound 14” Celestron EdgeHD optical tube with assurance.
With a heaviest single component of only 45 pounds, the CGEM DX 1400HD is the lightest and most portable version ever of Celestron’s flagship 14” telescope. Its light weight individual components and easily assembled mount make it easy for one person to set up and enjoy – either in your back yard or at a distant dark sky site. Its superb flat-field reduced-coma optical quality and reasonable price for a really big full-featured computerized go-to mount make this Sky & Telescope Hot Product for 2010 winner Celestron CGEM DX 1400HD a telescope that will provide you with years of affordable and enjoyable observing. Detailed information about this product's features Starbright XLT optics NexStar CGEM computer Celestron EdgeHD optics
This Telescope’s Optical System . . . - EdgeHD aplanatic Schmidt-Cassegrain optical tube: 14" aperture (3910mm focal length f/11). Guaranteed diffraction-limited optical performance, free from coma and corrected for spherical aberrations (aplanatic design). The optical design is a Sky & Telescope Hot Product for 2010. The 31" long aluminum optical tube has a large handle on the rear cell and weighs 45 pounds, making it a reasonable task to transport and assemble the scope in the field. For more details, click on the “EdgeHD optics" icon above.
- Starbright XLT fully multicoated optics: This high transmission/high reflectivity optical coatings package gives you visibly higher light transmission for brighter deep space images and shorter exposure times during CCD and DSLR photography. It also increases the contrast on subtle lunar, planetary, and nebula details when compared with a scope with ordinary coatings or multicoatings. For more details, click on the “Starbright XLT" icon above.
- Tube vents: Two cooling vents located on the rear cell allow warm air to be released from behind the primary mirror when the scope is taken out for a night’s observing or imaging. This shortens the amount of time needed for the optics to cool down to ambient air temperature for peak optical performance. Each vent has an integrated 60 micron micro-mesh filter guaranteed to let warm air out without letting dust in.
- Fastar compatible: For the ultimate in wide-field catadioptric imaging, the EdgeHD optical tube is Fastar compatible to allow CCD imaging at a blazingly-fast f/2 focal ratio, although without the benefits of the dual-element field flattener built into the scope’s baffle tube. An optional Fastar lens assembly lens replaces the telescope’s removable secondary mirror (an exchange that takes only a few minutes). Your CCD camera is attached to the Fastar lens. This puts your camera at the f/2 position in the center of the Schmidt corrector lens at the front of the scope, rather than in its normal f/10 position at the Cassegrain focus at the rear of the scope.
Using the Fastar system and a sub-$1300 Orion Star Shoot Deep Space Imager Pro CCD camera, the 14" CGE Pro 1400HD will record a wide 111 x 74 arc minute field – a long axis over three and one half times the diameter of the full Moon, an immense field for a scope of this size. To assure repeatability when you switch between Fastar and conventional imaging, the scope’s optical tube is opto-mechanically aligned on a laser bench during manufacture so that all components are axially symmetric in any configuration.
- Focusing: Focusing is accomplished by turning a knob at the rear of the scope body that moves the primary mirror fore and aft along a central baffle tube to adjust the focus. The Celestron focusing mechanism is supported by two pre-loaded ball bearings, minimizing the “mirror flop" typical of bushing focus mechanisms that causes image shift during critical focusing.
- Mirror locks: Flexible tension locks hold the mirror in place after correct focus is achieved for imaging and reduce image shift when rotating the tube around the mount (when moving past the zenith during astrophotography, for example). Unlike other designs that have only one locking knob located off to one side of the mirror, the Celestron system uses three locks equally spaced around the mirror to distribute the mirror locking force symmetrically. The focuser itself acts as one of the locks, while two flexible rods spaced 120° away in either direction act as the second and third locks. Controlled by variable tension knobs on the rear cell, these rods act in conjunction with the focuser to hold the mirror in place without putting any asymmetrical force or pressure on the mirror. This keeps the image centered in the eyepiece (or CCD chip) no matter what the orientation of the optical tube.
- Finderscope: 9 x 50mm straight-through achromatic design, with a substantial 5.8° field of view, in a quick-release bracket.
- Star diagonal: 2" first-surface mirror type, with 1.25" adapter.
- Eyepiece: premium 2" 23mm 82° field Axiom (170x), a much higher quality eyepiece than those supplied with competitive scopes. The eyepiece field of view is over 0.48° wide, almost as wide as the full Moon, and an exceptionally wide field for 170x magnification.
This Telescope’s Mount . . .
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| | Starbright XLT fully multicoated 14” f/11 Fastar-compatible EdgeHD optics; go-to fully computerized CGEM DX German equatorial mount with two 22 lb. counterweights; heavy duty adjustable height metal tripod; 40,000+ object computer hand control; PPEC (Permanent Periodic Error Compensation); built-in adjustable backlash compensation; RS-232 port for connection to a PC; NexRemote remote telescope control software with RS-232 cable; CCD autoguider port; 9 x 50mm finderscope; 2" star diagonal with 1.25” adapter; 2" 23mm Axiom eyepiece (122x); 12V DC car battery cord; dust covers. |
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