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      Contact information 
      
      website 
      
      
      http://www.astrosurf.com/amif2 
      . 
      
      Locator Map 
      http://www.frappr.com/apppublic 
      Level of accuracy: city of
      
              
              
              Koksijde,
              Belgium 
       
      
      Biography  
      
      I'm from 1953 vintage.  My interest in astronomy dates from when I was 
      very young, let's say in the early 60's.  I got my first telescope, a 60 
      mm refractor, after I worked during holidays to earn enough money to buy 
      this telescope.  After that I joined an astronomical society (VVS in 
      Belgium) and also found other people in my wider neighborhood with an 
      interest in telescopes and astronomy.  That's where and when I learned to 
      grind and polish my first mirror, a 110 mm f/10 plate glass mirror that 
      turned out quite well and was used for some time on a self-made mount.  I 
      made a few more mirrors and telescopes after that. Once I finished my 
      studies, I joined the Belgian Air Force as a student pilot in 1973 and got 
      my "wings" in 1976.  With my first earnings I bought a 200 mm f/6 mirror 
      from Fullerscopes in the United Kingdom.  This mirror was mounted in a PVC 
      sewer tube which turned out so heavy that a stronger mount was needed.  So 
      a Fullerscopes Mk 4 equatorial mount was bought and placed in a modified 
      garden shelter: birth of my first observatory.  Around this time 
      I also became interested in photography and so it was not long before 
      astronomy and photography joined into a hobby I still have today.  In 1978 
      I got a transfer to the Search and Rescue unit in Koksijde and flew SAR 
      missions with the Sea King Mk48.   I married in 1979, moved to a new home 
      in Koksijde-Oostduinkerke, got two lovely daughters and of course built a 
      small observatory in my garden.  This observatory was rebuilt and 
      enlarged by the end of the 90's and now houses my present equipment 
      (buying and selling and using lot's of equipment is part of the hobby, see 
      my website).  I left the Belgian Air Force in 1997 and now work as a 
      pilot for Noordzee Helikopters Vlaanderen (NHV) in Oostende, Belgium. In 
      the meantime I saw the transition from film astrophotography to present 
      day digital imaging and I'm surprised every day by what an amateur can 
      accomplish these days.  
      
      
      Astronomy Tales 
      
      After I polished my first mirror, it had to be coated.  Aluminizing at 
      that time was quite expensive, so chemical silvering was the way to go.  I 
      got the necessary ingredients, read all about it what I could find at the 
      time and then started the messy process in the kitchen, much to my 
      mother's despair.  Well, I must say that the mirror did not get any silver 
      on it at all, but a big glass dish that my mother normally used in the 
      oven and that I used as a recipient for the mirror got a very nice shiny 
      coating!  I also coated a few other glass recipients 
      in subsequent silvering trials.  Who remembers the spectroscopic emulsions 
      from Kodak: 103aO and E. These emulsions had an antireflection layer that 
      had to be rinsed off after development. I'm surely not the only one who 
      succeeded not only to remove the antireflection coating but the emulsion 
      as well after a night of painstakingly visual guiding on a dim guide 
      star...  And of course the many common astrophotographers mistakes: 
      guiding many minutes while the camera shutter speed was set at 1/1000 or 
      taking planet photos without film in the camera, etc etc etc. 
      
      
           
      Astrophotography publications 
      
      Magazines 
      
      Astronomy, Astronomy Now, Sky and Telescope, Heelal, Zenit, 
      Astrobulletin 
       
      Book and Newsletter 
      I compiled a book "Astrofotografie", a dutch astrophotography manual 
      published by the  
      VVS astronomical association. 
      I 
      have also published articles in our society's publication Heelal 
      
      
       
      
      Observing sites 
      
      
      
      
      Home site 
      My home 
      observatory is in Koksijde (Oostduinkerke), Belgium.  The observing 
      site is near  
      the coast, only 4 m AMSL.  This is a suburban location, on good nights I 
      have a limiting magnitude of 5 straight overhead, but most of the time it 
      is less.  
      
      Remote site 
      I try to go 
      to south-France for one or two weeks each year, these are not fixed 
      locations,  
      mainly a combination of holiday and astronomy. 
      
       
      
      
      Astronomical Equipment 
       Telescopes 
      
      Celestron C-11 SCT 
      APM/TMB 115 f/7 triplet APO 
      
       
      
      
      Mounts 
      ALT 
      7AD driven by an Astro-electronic FS2 
      Takahashi 
      EM200
       
      
       
      
      CCD Cameras   
        
      SBIG 
      ST-10XME 
      SBIG ST-2000XM 
        
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