Hi,
I have a RC scope. There are three pairs of these screws around the primary mirror (in the back of the telescope). I know that 3 screws are for adjusting the mirror position and the other 3 are for locking its position after adjustment.
I know that is "rare" that a primary needs to be adjusted on a RC scope, but I want to understand how it works the collimation with these screws, if I need to do it someday.
- the bigger screws are the ones for adjustment and the smaller screws are the locking ones, right?
- it is recommended to adjust ONE pair at a time, and avoid untightnening all the locking screws at the same time because that can mess up the focal lenght, correct?
The idea that I have (correct me if I'm wrong please) is that the procedure must be done in this order:
- untighten ONE lock screw
- adjust (tighten or untighten, depending on how much I want to adjust/move the mirror) the bigger screw of the SAME pair
- tighten the lock screw again of the first step
> move to the next pair
Thank you,
Clear Skies

I have a RC scope. There are three pairs of these screws around the primary mirror (in the back of the telescope). I know that 3 screws are for adjusting the mirror position and the other 3 are for locking its position after adjustment.
I know that is "rare" that a primary needs to be adjusted on a RC scope, but I want to understand how it works the collimation with these screws, if I need to do it someday.
- the bigger screws are the ones for adjustment and the smaller screws are the locking ones, right?
- it is recommended to adjust ONE pair at a time, and avoid untightnening all the locking screws at the same time because that can mess up the focal lenght, correct?
The idea that I have (correct me if I'm wrong please) is that the procedure must be done in this order:
- untighten ONE lock screw
- adjust (tighten or untighten, depending on how much I want to adjust/move the mirror) the bigger screw of the SAME pair
- tighten the lock screw again of the first step
> move to the next pair
Thank you,
Clear Skies
