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Celestron, Starsense, Telescoop, Zwart

99,00€ 498,74€
Gratis verzending bij bestellingen boven 25,99€

1.Stijlnaam:For Celestron


Productdetails

  • Maak van je Celestron telescoop een robot die je de hemel laat zien
  • Gewoon inschakelen en het apparaat regelt je telescoop vanzelf, zonder enige eigen voorkennis of voorprogrammering
  • Geen GPS-ontvangst nodig, alleen de hemel kijken, het gaat volautomatisch los
  • Inhoud: StarSense AutoAlign, StarSense handcontroller, twee telescopische aansluitplaten, gebruiksaanwijzing (mogelijk niet beschikbaar in het Nederlands)
  • Verbindingskabel voor montage, inbussleutel, bevestigingsschroeven


Productbeschrijving

Word een instant-astronoom, zelfs als je nog nooit een telescoop hebt gebruikt, dankzij de unieke StarSense AutoAlign. Stel het accessoire in, druk op de knop op de handbediening en StarSense begint afbeeldingen van de nachtelijke hemel vast te leggen en te vergelijken met de interne database. In ongeveer drie minuten is het voldoende om voldoende informatie te hebben om zijn positie te trianguleren en zichzelf uit te lijnen. Druk vervolgens op de Sky Tour-knop: StarSense draait automatisch naar de beste sterren, planeten, sterrenstelsels en meer die momenteel zichtbaar zijn in de nachtelijke hemel. De technologie voor zelfuitlijning achter onze bekroonde SkyProdigy-serie is nu beschikbaar. Een kleine digitale camera neemt de plaats in van uw zoeker en wordt bevestigd met behulp van een van de twee meegeleverde montagebeugels. De meegeleverde StarSense-handbediening, met een database van meer dan 40.000 hemellichamen, vervangt uw NeXStar-handbediening. De camera legt automatisch een reeks afbeeldingen van de lucht vast. StarSense identificeert de sterren in de afbeeldingen en koppelt ze aan de database. Zodra een positieve overeenkomst is bevestigd, berekent StarSense de coördinaten van het midden van het captuRood-beeld en bepaalt daarmee precies waar de telescoop op wijst.


anthony_1138
7 augustus 2025
I apologize for the length of this review, but I thought the details might be helpful for folks interested in this awesome little gadget.My Celestron StarSense arrived last week, and I’ve had a couple of chances to try it out. I’ve used the device exactly twice, but I think my experience may provide some useful information to others who are thinking of purchasing this device.My focus is on astrophotography and my rig is 100% portable on a tripod, so alignment is a frequent chore. I held off buying the device because I had read that it had severe issues integrating with Celestron’s native polar alignment process, ASPA (All-Star Polar Alignment). Once those issues were corrected by Celestron and I read a positive review of the device in Sky and Telescope, I went ahead and bought it. So far, I’m very glad I did.After unboxing, I immediately updated the firmware on the StarSense camera and the included hand controller. Be sure to do this – as I mentioned, Celestron fixed some major problems with the software since the release of the device, and you’ll want to be sure to capture these. Be sure you have the appropriate cables and adapters ready for this.Once the firmware was updated, I attached the SS camera to my scope. I have a non-Celestron OTA, but a Celestron Advanced VX mount. This was one point of annoyance with Celestron. They provide two mounting methods – a super-solid one for Celestron OTAs, and a not-so solid one for everyone else. I was mounting to a dovetail plate, and it was annoying that I couldn’t use the more solid method just because Celestron had made the mounting holes too narrow. If they had just provided a couple of holes at the standard mounting sizes they could have given folks a lot more options. Left with the secondary mounting method, I was glad I had an extra mounting base available, because Celestron doesn’t provide one with the unit (they assume you’re replacing your finderscope with the SS camera). I sacrificed my mounted laser pointer in favor of the SS camera and continued. If you have a single finderguider and no other mounting base available when the unit arrives, you’ll be waiting for Amazon to deliver before you can use the unit.After setting up outside and doing a rough polar alignment with a polar scope, I turned on the mount with the new HC and SS camera attached. The first thing the HC does is search for the SS camera, which it found with no problem.At startup, the HC gets a little “bossy” – there doesn’t seem to be a way to start up without going through the SSA (StarSense AutoAlign) process before doing anything else. I’m used to entering the DateTime and location, but that didn’t seem to be an option at startup. You can press the Menu button to add those details, but I didn't know that at the time.I let the SSA do its thing, and it slewed to four different sections of the sky. I was in my side yard, where the house and trees block much of the horizon, and light pollution is fairly severe. I had also neglected to turn a bright flood light attached to my roof off, just to keep things interesting. I started quite early, and I could only see 5-10 stars visually. I noticed that the HC was reporting that it was finding dozens of stars in areas of the sky where I still couldn’t see any.After a couple of minutes, the SSA wrapped up and reported success. At this point, I was 90% certain that the device hadn’t actually done anything – it was just a little too quick and easy. I told the HC to find Albireo. There it was – off center, but within the FOV of my 20mm eyepiece. Not bad. I told it to find Antares in the south. There it was. Whoa.At this point, Celestron has you resolve the error between the SS camera and your telescope by performing a centering procedure. This is done in the HC’s software and doesn’t involve adjusting the camera physically, which was a relief – I think I’ve had enough “dance of the thumbscrews” for one lifetime. The HC has a process for this that involves centering the star in your eyepiece and then confirming that it is centered with the HC. This was simple enough, but the (printed) instruction manual actually has a mistake in it about the steps in the process. It's a good idea to just download the (corrected) online manual if you buy this device.After the centering procedure, the HC tells you that you will need to repeat the SSA process. At this point it was a little unclear whether it expected me to simply run the process again or actually reset my mount to the alignment marks and start over. Thankfully, the former seemed to work just fine.Now, I had done all of this before entering the date, time or my current location. It seemed wrong to move on to polar alignment without entering that data, but then again – does the HC need to know the time or location if it knows the positions of all of the stars, especially if you’re not targeting solar system objects? The HC certainly didn’t seem concerned about it – I had to go menu surfing to even find where to enter the datetimelocation – I was never prompted for the information. I went ahead and entered the info and the HC told me to perform SSA again, which I did.The polar alignment process was simple. ASPA normally has two steps – the first where you center a star using the direction buttons on the HC, then the second when you’re asked to center the same star using the mount’s ALT and AZ alignment knobs. With SSA, the first step is done automatically and the user is left with the ALT and AZ adjustments.After the centeringcalibration process and ASPA, any stars or objects I selected were perfectly centered in the reticle eyepiece. I spent some time selecting objects near the four points of the compass and just being amazed when they all came up dead center. I started guiding and did some test shots using the CCD – I had perfect pinpoint stars for 12 minute exposures. That night I took 14 12-minute exposures of the Pelican Nebula and had some of the sharpest, roundest stars I’ve ever imaged. Long story short - ASPA was very easy and very accurate.On the second night out, I was just doing a rough alignment so I could take pictures of the moon with my bigger scope. I simply took the device off my refractor and put it onto my SCT, put the OTA on the mount, hooked it up, turned it on and let it align. I started even earlier that night, with only a few stars visible to these middle-aged eyes. No re-centering or fine-tuning, no entry of date or location, no polar alignment. A couple of minutes later, the SSA was done and the GOTO put the moon in the FOV of my 20mm eyepiece on the first try – this is with a 10” SCT – the FOV was less than a moon-width. I also tried several stars and they were all close to center, despite a different OTA and not performing a new centeringcalibration procedure.The bottom line: this device exceeded expectations on its first two nights out. I’d say if you have a portable setup this is a no-brainer purchase.Pros: Easy setup (other than the firmware update); easier telescope alignment; simplified ASPA; more accurate polar alignment (at least in my experience). Works in twilight, so you can start your alignment earlier. Works despite trees andor buildings obstructing large parts of the sky. Fast.Cons: Mounting brackets aren’t all that they could be (see above). Finder mount base not included. New HC has small-print display by default – can be hard to read especially from a distance.
Lumpus
1 augustus 2025
Compré el StarSense Autoalign para simplificar la alineación de un telescopio Nexstar 8SE y puedo confirmar que funciona de maravilla. Es fácil montarlo y la fijación es muy solida. Una vez montado es muy rápido y no hay necesidad de identificar o localizar estrellas: alinea automáticamente el telescopio. Lo pones en marcha y se puede observar en pocos minutos. Es bastante mas preciso que hacer la alineación manualmente. Lo uso con un Celestron SkySync GPS que busca la hora, fecha y y la longitude y latitud de forma automática (algo muy útil si observas en sitios distintos). Es caro pero merece la pena si quieres pasar menos tiempo montando el equipo y mas tiempo observando el cielo.
Davide
1 juni 2025
Ottima la telecamera Starsense che la si puo' controllare anche da Smartphone tramite app Skyportal con il modulo sempre Wifi SkyQ Link 2 sempre della Celestron , meno bene la Hand Controller che e' arrivata non funzionante per cui ho chiesto il reso e preso un altro starsense sempre qui su amazonAggiornamento 30/09/2021E' arrivato il secondo Starsense ( del primo devo ricevere il rimborso spero presto...) e su questo funziona tutto sia la fotocamera che il tastierino (Hand Controller)...montato , calibrato e allineato in 10 minuti...una volta fatta la prima calibrazione poi , se non si tocca la fotocamera , si puo' riallineare in qualche minuto senza dover ripetere la prima (piu' lunga ma non difficile) procedura....estremamente soddisfatto per velocita' di allinemento e precisione sia su oggetti planetari che deep sky
minou4136
17 februari 2025
Conforme à la description, fonctionne très bien !
David S Mills
20 november 2024
This has the look and feel of a well made instrument. Installation on a Nexstar 8SE was a snap with the exception of the hand control plug into the mount, someone at Celestron has a sense of humor. I hooked it up with the SkySync GPS and the SkyPortal WIFI dongle and after booting up and asking for a few entries it took off and started looking around on it's own, pausing, then moving on and repeating it's tour of the sky.In the end with a successful alignment it happily pointed at everything I asked for.I live in the city with a ton of light pollution where manual alignments are a chore, this thing does it faster and must see things I can not. Overall a great piece of kit that is fast, accurate and actually fun to watch.