Cleaning and Collimating the Meade Telescope

Cleaning and Collimating

Some basic notes on cleaning

This is almost guaranteed to convince you it needs cleaning.

Instead rely on your experience of past occasions of looking through it.

2. If in doubt — DO NOT LOOK AT THE GLASS WITH A TORCH !

DON’T !   DON’T !  DON’T !

3. Try your best to avoid moisture getting on it, this will allow dust to stick to it making it more difficult to clean without damaging the coatings.

Cleaning the Corrector Plate of the Meade 14.

Now that you are very sure the corrector plate needs cleaning, this is how to go about it. The telescope should be off, so should be pointing at RA = due south and DEC = 90°. Slacken the clutches carefully, remembering that the tube is out of balance and heavy, and point it as low as you are comfortable with, but below the horizontal and tighten the clutches again.


With the hair dryer in one hand blowing cool air only and a 2″ or so soft paint brush in the other hand, brush the outer and inner end of the tube, the black painted metal outside the glass itself. Do the same to the metal outer face and sides of the secondary carrier too, removing all the dust you can.

Then with the brush well cleaned of dust, gently and carefully brush the glass face of the corrector plate. Do this horizontally, top half then bottom half, still with the hair dryer blowing cool air, and “flap” the brush’s bristles against a grease-free stiff edge, like the cleaned edge of the table, to remove dust after each pass across the surface.
All this is to remove loose dust only.

With a damp cloth, wipe all the metalwork so far dusted. This to prevent dust from there getting back onto the glass.

Now to the glass itself and the stuck on dust and grime.
Much has been said on what chemicals to use here, but the simplest is to use a detergent, a washing up detergent, preferably an un-perfumed one in solution with clean water, preferably but not necessarily, de-ionized in a light strength solution, as in washing the dishes. You are trying here to get dust off that has been stuck on by moisture and other contaminants.

Use a Kleenex tissue folded into a pad and well dampened. Pad it on the glass to dampen it, repeatedly unfolding and refolding the pad, to cover the whole surface, using clean parts of the pad each time. With another similarly dampened and folded tissue, starting at the top and working in quadrants, wipe the surface in short segments in a ROLLING manner. This means apply the pad, then immediately start rolling it backwards while moving the pad forwards. Stop, lift off, refold the tissue to expose an unused part, and continue the process, apply, roll backwards, wipe forwards.

Use many tissues, we are not here to minimise the use of tissues or save trees. Better to use many more tissues than needed than too few. There is sense in not bothering to refold tissues, using new each time is safer.

Be careful not to make the pads so wet as to pool at the bottom of the metalwork tube. Keep dabbing this area clear of water to stop it from tube past the seal.

You should have now cleaned the whole surface of the glass and it is likely to show sleeks. So do it all again, again with clean tissues. Recheck that all the metalwork is still dust free, and do it again. That makes 3 times washed.

If you are sure it is all well cleaned, you must be very sure it is all cleaned now, metalwork and glass, you can start buffing the glass with more tissues. Here you rub the glass to a polish, carefully of course, knowing that if dust is still there you will be rubbing it in, not off, and scoring the coatings.

One little but important point,don’t just follow these instructions as written, you must also keep looking for dust, everywhere, and here you can look at the glass with a torch, but with no other light, so the torch light stands out, and accentuates the dust.

Quite a lot of verbage there but all necessary, so don’t skimp the job.

BJ-28.1.16soaking into the interior of the

Collimating the Meade 14″

A relatively easy operation, but important. The aim is to get the optical elements of the telescope sitting exactly on the same centre line, exactly in line with each other.

Find a clear still night, if you can, though some haze isn’t going to spoil things, in fact it should help by steadying the atmosphere. Then a suitable star, about mag 3 to 2, and make sure it isn’t a double. Don’t use the star diagonal here. Though it might make you stretch your neck, the bendy bit could introduce an error and leave the job incorrectly done.

You will need to use two eyepieces, a 26mm one first, then repeat the job (greater accuracy) with a 9mm one.

With the 26mm eyepiece in, defocus the star to make a doughnut of it, a large white circle with a black circle in the centre, inside focus, not outside focus. Move the telescope carefully till the doughnut is in the middle of the eyepiece’s field. This is an important step. You can only judge the collimation with the star in the middle of the field, don’t try to judge it when it is near the edge. With the doughnut in the middle, and this is in the middle of the eyepiece field, not what you see in the eyepiece, which means you should put your eye close enough to the eyepiece to see the whole field. This to ensure you have the disc in the middle.

Now you can judge how good the collimation is. If the white disc and the black one are completely concentric, you need go only one step further, and that is to replace the 26mm eyepiece with a much shorter one, like a 9mm one. Again refocus the star to a doughnut condition, inside focus, and position it in the centre of the eyepiece field, and rejudge.

If the two discs are still concentric. The job is done.

However, if the white and black discs are not concentric, you have some work to do.
The same actions need to be taken with either eyepiece, so I’ll describe what you’ll need to do with the 26.