Mercury transit.

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Tillibobs Great Britain
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Mercury transit.

#1

Post by Tillibobs »


Why is it that whenever something special is happening it buckets it down ? I kept looking out of the window but all I could see was rain and more rain. looks like the roads will be flooded for the second time in less than a week.
Did anyone get to see the Transit ? and if they did,where are the images ?

Keith.
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Re: Mercury transit.

#2

Post by Lady Fraktor »


A lot of clouds here today, I managed a few quick peeks at the transit.
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Re: Mercury transit.

#3

Post by Altocumulus »


I too managed a couple of peeks, but it was through cloud!
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Re: Mercury transit.

#4

Post by fish4evr »


[/image]https://photos.app.goo.gl/h8jCaQ93yEqeMAGBA

It's just a cell phone pic. A little windy but clear.
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Re: Mercury transit.

#5

Post by AntennaGuy »


clouds.jpg
Completely overcast in Tyler TX. Can't even locate the sun.
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Re: Mercury transit.

#6

Post by notFritzArgelander »


Weather was fine here but I was defeated by dogs. I bailed out and watched bits of it at Slooh.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fzcmd_KQpEw
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Re: Mercury transit.

#7

Post by bladekeeper »


If I uncapped my scope, the OTA would be full of freezing rain and sleet. It is so dark the street lights are on. :lol:

I feel your pain, my friend. :)
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Re: Mercury transit.

#8

Post by Kingofthehill »


Bright blue sky here. Watching the transit was a tad boring. Took in about 15 minutes. The excitement was too much, had to go back inside.
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Re: Mercury transit.

#9

Post by Bigzmey »


Sorry to hear guys. My home was socked in fog and clouds this morning, but two hours and 87 mls later I did catch the second half from the desert.
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Re: Mercury transit.

#10

Post by Thefatkitty »


I feel you pain as well, Keith.

This was my view today; the Sun is actually about halfway up the 'V' in our tree. Uh-huh. It's still snowing too :lol:

IMG_1099 (2).png


Nice pics from those that saw it, though! :D
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Re: Mercury transit.

#11

Post by Kingofthehill »


However, it was fascinating to think that Mercury was moving at around 112000 MPH and its movement couldn't be detected by the eye.
Paul
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AR152 and Orion ST80 sit mostly unused
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Re: Mercury transit.

#12

Post by SKEtrip »


No joy here either, same bank of clouds. I must apologize to all, it is my fault really. Shouldn't have taken a vacation day.
Caught it on Slooh live stream.
I believe Bladekeeper put it best when he said "transit, eclipse, occultation are all Latin for cloudy"
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Re: Mercury transit.

#13

Post by Thefatkitty »


SKEtrip wrote: Wed Nov 13, 2019 2:24 am No joy here either, same bank of clouds. I must apologize to all, it is my fault really. Shouldn't have taken a vacation day.
Caught it on Slooh live stream.
I believe Bladekeeper put it best when he said "transit, eclipse, occultation are all Latin for cloudy"
Oh, you took a vacation day too?? Well, in that case it's not just your fault... :lol:

Yeah, and I think Bryan's right...
Mark

"The Hankmeister" Celestron 8SE, orange tube Vixen made C80, CG4, AZ-EQ5 and SolarQuest mounts.
Too much Towa glass/mirrors.

Solar:
H/A - PST stage 2 mod with a Baader 90mm ERF on a Celestron XLT 102 (thanks Mike!)
Ca-K - W/O 61mm, Antares 1.6 barlow, Baader 3.8 OD and Ca-K filters with a ZWO ASI174mm.
W/L - C80-HD with Baader 5.0 & 3.8 Solar film, Solar Continuum 7.5nm and UV/IR filters with a Canon EOS 550D.
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