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I know a few keen amateur astronomers who make extra cash by producing astronomical equipment for other amateurs. Some of them are very skilled, and could probably start a fully-fledged business if they wanted to, but they prefer to keep it as a hobby.

I paid one guy $400 to build me an equatorial platform for my 12-inch Dob. The value it provides me is way higher than the financial cost, and he could probably charge more for his work, but I think his main motivation comes from the satisfaction of building things he's proud of and that others can enjoy. Certainly, when I occasionally donate my time and knowledge at public astronomy outreach events, I find it very rewarding, especially if I can inspire children's interest.

N.B. By far the biggest weakness of Dobsonian (or any alt-azimuth mounted) telescopes is the lack of tracking, and thus having continuously to nudge the tube to keep objects centred. An equatorial platform eliminates this weakness, and I strongly recommend one to anyone who's frustrated with their alt-az scope.




It's a very small market. And at the higher volume lower end (cheap scopes for newbies) you can't compete with chinese mass production.

> An equatorial platform eliminates this weakness, and I strongly recommend one

Agreed. You own a dob, just get a platform already. It's even useful for astrophotography.


you can track with an alt-az mount, no problem. It doesn't rotate, but as long as you know an alt az pointing, and have feedback servos, you can track any celestial location. Tracking at very high azimuth is hard, though.


The larger the mirror the more you'll need it.




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