of course this works for smaller sizes too
an 8" scope is 4x as powerful as a 4", and almost twice as powerful as a
6". similarly, 6" is more than twice as powerful as a 4". these are
relevant numbers when someone is asking: should I get a go-to 4" or a
non-electronic 6" or 8"?
4" scope = 12.5 sq in
6" scope = 28 sq in
8" scope = 50 sq in
and if you just need to quickly compare two scopes - don't bother to
multiply by pi (it just cancels out). and you don't have to change from
diameter to radius. just compare the square of the diameter of the two
scopes. e.g.
for 4", square of diameter is 16
for 6", square of diameter is 36
for 8", square of diameter is 64
as you can see, the same proportions hold:
an 8" scope is 4x as powerful as a 4", and almost twice as powerful as a
6". similarly, 6" is more than twice as powerful as a 4".
On 7/20/2016 12:19 PM, roger anzini (Redacted sender twinklescope for
DMARC) wrote:
William,
I knew there was a reason for lugging this big, heavy 16" thing around, all over the place.
Thank You for giving me the answer in tasty slices.
Best clear skies,
Roger
On Wednesday, July 20, 2016 11:12 AM, Leah S <lphxaz@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
after watching this video, I'm hungry... lucky there's a kosher pizza
place nearby. :)
now did you say something about size of telescopes? tell me again while
I'm eating the pizza. :D
On 7/20/2016 9:54 AM, William Finch wrote:
>
> Thought this might be useful for explaining why an 8 inch scope is
> twice the light gathering of a 6 inch. Breaks it down in easy English.
> https://youtu.be/YAawHbPiQfo
>