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Usually, with an astro telescope, or binoculars of any quality, the detail is so mind blowing that you can't take it all in. It looks like that completely overblown, LG 4K OLED TV picture of a city at night. The deeper you look the more rewarding it becomes. Like fractal images which literally go on forever. Every crater has another crater inside the last. A visual Russian nested dolls situation, if you like. The Vortex Razor lacked that "special" quality. Which I find puzzling.
The Razor's eye lens is huge in diameter. Could the moon and sky light be bouncing back and forth between my eye and the eye lens? Could the sky light be leaking in all around the sides of the huge lens ring?
Where is it all going to go? It can't all be sucked in though the small camera lens like a black hole. So lots of light is going to be scattered back and forth between the huge eye lens and the chromed Ixus lens housing.
camera switched on. There was no visible light leaking in anywhere.
The Moon's washed out appearance is a worry. It greatly reduces contrast. The huge eyepiece doesn't lend itself readily to conventional shielding with a "winged" light excluder.
My astro eyepieces did not suffer to the same extent while viewing the moon in broad daylight. They did not have the usual light excluders either. These eyepieces were roughly half the diameter of the Vortex. With the eye lenses sunken inside a tube.
The Vortex' is almost on the surface of the eye ring. This must increase its vulnerability. Though the outer rubber ring can be twisted up and down, to cater for spectacle wearers, it rarely stays still for long. The only way to keep it from rotating freely would be to tape it to the body! When raised, it must greatly improve light exclusion. Though not for the camera. Which demands the ring be fully lowered. The rubber ring has locking system but it is far too loose to be useful. There doesn't seem to be any means of adjustment when the outer rubber ring is removed.
My astro eyepieces did not suffer to the same extent while viewing the moon in broad daylight. They did not have the usual light excluders either. These eyepieces were roughly half the diameter of the Vortex. With the eye lenses sunken inside a tube.
The Vortex' is almost on the surface of the eye ring. This must increase its vulnerability. Though the outer rubber ring can be twisted up and down, to cater for spectacle wearers, it rarely stays still for long. The only way to keep it from rotating freely would be to tape it to the body! When raised, it must greatly improve light exclusion. Though not for the camera. Which demands the ring be fully lowered. The rubber ring has locking system but it is far too loose to be useful. There doesn't seem to be any means of adjustment when the outer rubber ring is removed.
Or is it just the skylight leaking in all around my eye socket? That should be improved by gluing a black felt ring to the rubber ring around the Razor's eye lens. Even if it doesn't seal against skylight it will help to cut it down.
Or, I can easily experiment by covering my head with a black [shade] cloth while looking at the Moon in daylight.I added a crudely cut gasket of black rubber to reduce all risk of light intrusion.
Adjusting the camra back and forth on the telescope adapter produces some weird effects.
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