See, this is how we fix the problem.  Until Pentax fixes the DFS problem, all 
the astro guys can go and use the Hale.;-)

Seriously, the more discussion we have about this the better the chance Pentax 
will fix it.  The number of people bothered by the long exposure issue is going 
to be much smaller than the group that worries about picking an AF sensor.  
With one interesting thread, however, it's now a feature on the list of "things 
to be fixed for the K7".  Let's have a long exposure PUG theme some month.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Matthew 
Hunt
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 7:28 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: K-7 new firmware 1.01

On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 3:46 AM, John Francis<[email protected]> wrote:

> That makes the f-stop somewhere close to 3.3 by my calculation.

We have a winner.

That's for "prime focus", where you just have the primary mirror in
the light path (plus some refractive corrective elements to improve
aberrations).  If you deploy the secondary mirror, you get an f/16
Cassegrain focus.  Additional mirrors can be deployed to provide an
f/30 Coudé focus, but that's not used much anymore.

(The advantage of Coudé is that the light is brought to a focus in a
nearby room, where you can build large, stationary instruments that
don't have to move with the telescope.  With modern technology, this
is not generally necessary.)

Modern observatory telescopes tend to have faster primary mirrors
(e.g. Keck is f/1.75), but tend not to offer a prime focus instrument
position.  So, for example, at Keck the f/15 Cassegrain focus is the
fastest focal ratio available.

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