DIY rubber feet for your astronomical tripod

See sub forums to discuss "Do it yourself" projects.
Post Reply
User avatar
Bigzmey United States of America
Moderator
Moderator
Articles: 8
Online
Posts: 7645
Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 7:55 pm
4
Location: San Diego, CA USA
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

DIY rubber feet for your astronomical tripod

#1

Post by Bigzmey »


My iOptron AZMP tripod legs have metal caps which removable metal spikes.
legs caps.jpg
legs spikes.jpg
Neither is good for a wooden deck or concrete floor. I was using vibration pucks, but they have tendency to slide out.

The other day I was looking for something in the garage and stumbled on a tube of racquetballs.
balls.jpg
Bingo! :D Cut them a bit off center - perfect fit! They are made of tough thick rubber, so should last for awhile.
legs rubber.jpg
Scopes: Stellarvue: SV102ED; Celestron: 9.25" EdgeHD, 8" SCT, 150ST, Onyx 80ED; iOptron: Hankmeister 6" Mak; SW: 7" Mak; Meade: 80ST.
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
EPs: Pentax: XWs & XFs; TeleVue: Delites, Panoptic & Plossls; ES: 68, 62; Vixen: SLVs; Baader: BCOs, Aspherics, Mark IV.
Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.

Observing: DSOs: 3106 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2180, S110: 77). Doubles: 2437, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 257
User avatar
JayTee United States of America
Universal Ambassador
Articles: 2
Online
Posts: 5640
Joined: Thu Apr 25, 2019 3:23 am
4
Location: Idaho, USA
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

Re: DIY rubber feet for your astronomical tripod

#2

Post by JayTee »


What a great discovery. This is an excellent use of an object intended for something completely different. Although, one could claim that observational astronomy for amateurs is a sports. At least at my age, observing and the physical demands it makes, feels like a sport.
∞ Primary Scopes: #1: Celestron CPC1100 #2: 8" f/7.5 Dob #3: CR150HD f/8 6" frac
∞ AP Scopes: #1: TPO 6" f/9 RC #2: ES 102 f/7 APO #3: ES 80mm f/6 APO
∞ G&G Scopes: #1: Meade 102mm f/7.8 #2: Bresser 102mm f/4.5
∞ Guide Scopes: 70 & 80mm fracs -- The El Cheapo Bros.
∞ Mounts: iOptron CEM70AG, SW EQ6, Celestron AVX, SLT & GT (Alt-Az), Meade DS2000
∞ Cameras: #1: ZWO ASI294MC Pro #2: 662MC #3: 120MC, Canon T3i, Orion SSAG, WYZE Cam3
∞ Binos: 10X50,11X70,15X70, 25X100
∞ EPs: ES 2": 21mm 100° & 30mm 82° Pentax XW: 7, 10, 14, & 20mm 70°

Searching the skies since 1966. "I never met a scope I didn't want to keep."

Image
Post Reply

Create an account or sign in to join the discussion

You need to be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

Register

Sign in

Return to “The DIY corner”