I'm just dipping a toe here, bought a basic telescope and star chart so far, but if I get into it will upgrade.
Any advice on anything related?
Any advice on anything related?
Any problems calibrating scope to location?I'm just dipping a toe here, bought a basic telescope and star chart so far, but if I get into it will upgrade.
Any advice on anything related?
Sorry Nitt, no can help.I'm just dipping a toe here, bought a basic telescope and star chart so far, but if I get into it will upgrade.
Any advice on anything related?

50 years ago, I shot stars to navigate, hoping that knowledge is still somewhere in the back of my old noggin and will be of some help. Starting my reading this weekend and hoping for clear skies in upstate NYI bought an 11inch smith Cassegrain a while back. It is a beast. If you look at the middle star in the sword of the constellation Orion, then increase the magnification of the lens if you are patient one might peer into the center of the trapezium. They outline the center of the Orion Nebula where stars are born.
I would recommend start small. Learn the basics of longitude and latitude, in astronomy, right of ascension, sidereal time and your latitude based on your relation to Ursula minor. Once these parameters are understood, you will be better able to assess your needs. But along with setup by knowing a couple other alignment constellations and have a clock attached to advance the scope with the rotation of the earth. The heavens will open for you. I rather enjoy deep space objects. Although a good scope with a clock that secures the scope to Jupiter one make watch the moons orbit around their planet.