October 21, 2000 St Joseph, Missouri
I began building the 8'X10' observatory on October 14, 2000 because it would take me over an hour
to align & setup my 8" Meade LX200 telescope and all the related equipment each time I want to use it.
With a the telescope permantly mounted in a backyard observatory, I would be operational in a matter of moments.
The only available area for viewing was on top of a 5 foot high back terrace. The 1st photo shows our 2 story house that somewhat
blocks my western sky. As you can see, the southern sky is pretty much obliberated because of one of our garages. I can view over
the top of it however.
The floor is raised 15" off the ground. Shown are 4 photos of the basic framework & 3/4" plywood flooring. The walls are 60" tall
as the roof will be a roll-off design.
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October 28, 2000
I covered the framework with 11/16" Sheeting.
Regrets: I should have used the sheets of 3/8" Masonite siding that comes prepainted - I found out later the costs were close
to the same price and would have looked alot better.
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November 4, 2000
I now have the door installed, the roof built, the telescope pedestal installed, electrical wiring
and telephone cable installed. The telescope will mount on the black pedestal. Red & White lights have been installed.
The red is for night vision and is controlled via a variable lightswitch so I can vary the illumination. The white light
rarely is used but nice to have. The pedestal is a 9" diameter steel tube that is buried 4' into the ground with 12" of concrete
surrounding it.
Regrets: I should have totally engulfed the steel pole in concrete for added stability. This may still come about.


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December 2, 2000
Large 2x6 Timbers support the roof in the slid-off position.
Finally, The roof now rolls open & closed but since it is so heavy, it's difficult sliding it open.
Since we were rushing against snow & other winter weather, the roof was just tossed together and tar papered.
It slides 12 feet to the north, clearing the building.
Regets: I should have made it to slide another foot out as it slightly obstructs the northern view slightly, but I am still
able to sight in Polaris when the leaves drop from the trees.



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January 1, 2001
Inside Photos

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May 13,2001
New Roof & Carpet
This weekend I replaced the particle board & tar paper roof with green steel galvanized roofing.
Since the roof had been built incorrectly for supporting a steel roof, all trusses had to be removed and re-assembled
using another method of support. The light blue underside is 3/8" foam sheeting.

Not only did this lighten the roof tremendously, it also added lots of headroom with the roof in closed position.
I then installed the 20 foot angle iron tracks on top of the 2x6 support tails for the roof to glide on. With new 2.5"
steel wheel assemblies installed, the roof now glides off easily with one hand. In fact, a good stiff breeze will slid it.
I had to install a removable roof stop on the east wall. I left the BYO unattended one day for 15 minutes with the roof in the
open position. Upon returning, the wind had blown it almost closed, striking my scope which was pointing upward.
Luckily, no damage was done to the scope.
Wall to wall outside compatible commercial grade carpet was installed which makes it nice on the knees when crawling
around beneath the scope.
The interior is in the process of being painted green.
The next major step will be installing white vinyl siding.
Regrets: I wish I had chosen white steel roofing rather than dark green. I have measured temperatures as high as 110F with the
BYO shut up all day. White roofing would have absorbed less of the sun's heat.

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May 20,2001 to June 17, 2001
New Modifications

These are 2 of the 4 metal tie downs I installed to keep the roof locked closed.
It also prevents wind from lifting the roof off. We
get some pretty windy days here in Missouri.

I am currently painting the exterior walls, interior walls, rails & posts green. This will improve the looks
until I can side the structure with vinyl siding.

Always looking for a flashlight - so I built a holder for both red lense flashlights with room for 2 standard
flashlights if I need them.

Tele-vue Qwik Point (wasn't impressed with it, replaced it with a Telrad later)

Rear shot showing the Azmuth adjustment screws I rigged up. The screws on each side allows
very minor left & right adjustments to the wedge. The 1/4" wire surrounding the base was
constructed for hanging my Meade hand controller onto.

This is my new Black Cat CCD Autoguiding camera. It will preview your targets on your monitor in real time, making
it very simple to focus. It has a LUX of .1 to .00009 and shutter speeds of 1/60 to 100,000 sec.
Photos taken with this camera can be seen in my photo album.

Side views showing the double 3/4" steel plates that hold my wedge.
Regrets: I should have installed more electrical outlets when construction began, at least one on each wall and one in the
floor near the pedestal.
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October 2002
New Modifications - Milburn Wedge & Telrad added



2 great additions. The Telrad makes aiming the scope a snap. The Milburn Wedge really steadies the scope on the pillar post and makes minor adjustments a snap
March 22, 2007
Time for new siding. The particle board siding looked bad
from the beginning, so finally I am recovering it with plywood siding.

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