Thursday, June 18, 2026

Rain and Telescopes don't mix well!

One of the benefits of having an observatory to house your equipment is the added convenience and protection it offers. With the right sensors and software—which I expect to have in place within a couple of months—the system can automatically detect bad weather, park the telescope, close the dome, and shut everything down. That means no worrying about sudden rain.

Last evening, I had the scope set up outside. When clouds started rolling in, I checked the weather radar and forecast. Nothing showed up, and it indicated a 0% chance of rain (or at least I’m pretty sure it did 🙂). I shut everything down as a precaution, but I didn’t cover the scope. Then at 8:30 this morning, a loud thunderclap woke me up—sure enough, a full-blown storm had arrived.

I rushed outside to bring everything in. Fortunately, the scope was parked in position 5, meaning it was horizontal, so the optics weren’t directly exposed. Both scopes also had their lens covers on, which helped. However, the camera, computer, network couplers, mount control box, and power packs all ended up getting soaked.

Since none of the equipment was powered on, I’m hopeful there won’t be any permanent damage. I took everything apart, wiped it down, and moved it into my Longarm Building, where I run a dehumidifier and keep the AC at 72°F. With the humidity at about 40%, I’m giving it a solid 72 hours to dry out.
I had planned to disassemble everything eventually when moving to the new observatory, but this situation pushed that timeline up by a few weeks.

The bottom line: the EdgeHD11 will likely be out of commission for at least two months.

Lesson learned - don't trust the forecast! Can't wait to get the Observatory built.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Venus Occultation - June 17, 2026

A daytime occultation of the planet Venus occurred at approximately 3:47 PM, when the bright planet was gradually covered by the dark edge of the thin crescent moon. Disappearance took a mere 30 seconds for the sunlit portion of the gibbous planet. Conditions were not great as there were a significant number of cumulous clouds making finding and focusing on the pair difficult. I used my wide field WO ZS61 telescope and ASI533mc camera to capture the full diameter of the moon. Image scale of the scope and seeing conditions of the sky made any attempt at capturing detail on the planet impossible.


At 5:10 PM Venus reappeared, but behind a large cloud. Minutes later I was able to capture some video of the planet very close to the bright lunar limb.









Day 7 - Night Sky Observatory build

A beautiful, sunny but cool, day greeted us on Tuesday. Mike T. arrived early with the additional decking boards. I removed the j-bolt template from the concrete pier - took just a little extra effort as the board was in contact with the cement.

In just a couple of hours (give or take) we had the deck completed.

The SkyShed Pier was test fitted to the bolts. One of the holes needed to be enlarged a bit. Pier fit perfectly. I leveled the pier but have to wait until later today or tomorrow for the hardware I ordered from Home Depot.

POD-S assembly should begin soon - probably week after next as I have an engagement all next week.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Day 6 of Night Sky Observatory Build

Today Mike T. and I got a fairly early start, and everything was going to plan. We added the joist hangers around the perimeter and in the center section. Then we started placing the deck floorboards on the northern side of the frame with the plan to be able to pour the concrete into the 16" Sonotube from the deck top to make life a bit easier. Got the first few boards in and then placed the sonotube in the 20" hole and centered it. Off to mix the concrete and start pouring. So far, so good.
Now the 16" tube is quite large, as the specs called for a 14" which I couldn't find anywhere. But the 16" should work just fine. It wasn't until the concrete got to the top of the tube when near disaster struck!! The plan was to backfill the hole around the tube after the column was centered. But the weight of the concrete, coupled with us tamping the concrete down to eliminate any voids in the concrete caused the tube to rupture. The tube fell to one side! There was obviously no way we were going to right it and so we pulled the tube completely out and let all that concrete collapse into the hole. The concrete now settled into one huge footer!! 

Quick thinking ensued and we decided that in order to save the day we would need to add a new section of concrete (about 18" or so) to set up on top of the existing 'new' footer before the original concrete started to set. We quickly headed out for the only Home Depot (about 20 minutes away) that had 16" sonotubes to get another tube and some rebar.

Once back at the site we cut the tube to the required length, pushed it down into the footer about 6-8" and drove five, 48" long rebars into the still wet cement of the footer. We then poured another 3 bags of concrete into the new sonotube. It was pretty much level (just a fraction off) and so we decided to leave well enough alone. I then placed the j-bolts into the top of the concrete column for the pier attachment. Done!
The good news is that the huge footer and rebar reinforced 18" top section might actually be stronger than the planned 16" column - might even be considered overkill. So be it. 

Tomorrow, we place the remaining boards. Then I plan to allow the concrete to cure for 96 hours. By Sunday I should be able to mount the pier for a quick test.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Day 4 and 5 of Night Sky Observatory Build

Days 4 and 5 - completed the footers and the framing of the deck. Friday the complete frame of the deck was completed.
Today the ground cover was placed and the backfilling of the posts. Ready for the deck surface to be completed on Monday.



Thursday, June 4, 2026

Day 2 and 3 of Night Sky Observatory build

Yesterday was the day to complete the removal of the remaining grass and to travel to three Home Depots to finally get the 16"x48" form tube (they shipped me a 10" and the 16" tubes were hard to find. Then there were the anchor bolts ... what a task that was to get them. Whew. Started digging the holes.
Today the corner footer holes for the deck were completed and the concrete poured (2 bags per hole). The dig of the pier footer hole took awhile being 18"x 38-40" deep! But it is ready for concrete pour later this weekend. Decided to build the deck first, cut the center hole for the pier and then pour concrete from the top of the deck. This way I can precisely set the footer height to be at just the right height for the pier base to be just an inch or so under the deck floor.
Temps are getting a bit steep here in Maryland, so tomorrow is gonna be a bit uncomfortable (90's). 


 

Monday, June 1, 2026

Groundbreaking on Night Sky Observatory

Today marked the official groundbreaking for Night Sky Observatory. The plot was measured and the stakes were set. I chose to align the east and west sides of the deck as close to true north as possible, using an iPhone app called Theodolite to position the stakes. The alignment is likely not exact, but it does not need to be. I aimed to keep it close because the plot was already oriented that way.

Next came digging the hole. Progress was slow at first because the soil was very rocky, and I hit several stones and medium-sized rocks within the first foot. After that, digging became much easier. Because the concrete pier footing must extend below the frost line, I dug to the full 48-inch depth of the Sono tube. Tomorrow, I will need to shape the hole more precisely once the Sono tube arrives and I can confirm the required diameter, which should be 16 inches.

Every project needs a supervisor, and so Luna was there to make sure everything went to plan.

Tomorrow the decking boards and concrete arrive.


Rain and Telescopes don't mix well!

One of the benefits of having an observatory to house your equipment is the added convenience and protection it offers. With the right senso...