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Small Frame, Big Ambition — My Nights with the UltraCat 76

Author

Simone Curzi

Simone Curzi is an astrophotographer celebrated for his detailed deep-sky mosaics, dust complexes, and wide-field nebular work created with William Optics optics. His artistic approach blends scientific accuracy with immersive visual storytelling, producing images that have earned major international recognition, including NASA APOD, the nPAE World Champion title, multiple ASIWeek selections, and the European AstroFest 2025 Award. As a PixInsight instructor, event organizer, and active member of both the ShaRA Team and the Associazione Astrofili Forca Canapine, he teaches advanced processing techniques and supports community-driven collaboration. Simone also works closely with manufacturers and institutions on equipment testing, educational outreach, and dark-sky initiatives, helping elevate both the creative and technical frontiers of modern astrophotography.

Small Frame, Big Ambition — My Nights with the UltraCat 76

Unboxing & First Impressions

In the signature red-and-black UltraCat livery, the telescope arrives in a padded, well-finished carry case, with a numbered certificate and a quality-control checklist signed before shipping.

Inside you’ll find:

  • Optical tube with 30th Anniversary CNC rings and engravings
  • Vixen/Arca-Swiss dovetail bar
  • Sensor Tilt Xterminator rotator
  • Bahtinov-mask front cap
  • UltraGuide 32 mm guide scope
  • Optional K-Astec EAF kit (for ZWO EAF motor)
  • Built-in thermometer
  • M54 and M48 camera adapters with wrench
  • Full Allen-key set

The perceived build quality, both visually and to touch, is exceptional: no plastic parts, minimal tolerances, flawless anodizing and markings throughout, and a sleek, elegant design.

Its compactness stands out immediately, enhanced by a retractable dew shield that slides smoothly with no play.
The tube diameter is generous, while overall length remains manageable.
The Vixen bar is finally robust and properly sized, unlike many undersized competitors, and the top mini-Vixen rail lets you attach multiple accessories beyond a simple guide scope.

The field rotator operates with reassuring solidity; once the tension screw is loosened, rotation is fluid and precise.
Both M54 and M48 adapters are included and easily installed with the supplied wrench.

The sample also came with a K-Astec EAF adapter, a Japanese-made premium accessory using a small belt drive to couple the ZWO EAF motor, silent, secure, and perfectly aligned.

After mounting the guide scope and EAF, I configured the imaging train with a ZWO CAA, a filter wheel, and the ASI 6200MM Pro camera.
I did note that to properly tighten the CAA, the large locking screw of the WO rotator had to be fully released, otherwise it blocked the thread. This raised a small concern about potential misalignment, an aspect I later verified during the optical tests.

Once everything was ready, I mounted the setup on my ZWO AM5N mount at my secondary pier, eager to begin field testing.


Field Test – William Optics UltraCat 76 (M31, Full Frame)

Setup & Acquisition

  • Optics: William Optics UltraCat 76 (365 mm f/4.8)
  • Camera: ZWO ASI 6200MM Pro (3.76 µm, full frame)
  • Mount: ZWO AM5N
  • Exposure: L × 60 | R/G/B × 30 each | O III × 65 | H α × 90 (all 300 s)
  • Calibration: darks, flats, dark-flats
  • Software: PixInsight

Testing and Fine Tuning

After the first test frames, I noticed a very slight tilt, nothing serious, but enough to test the new built-in adjustment system.
This was the perfect opportunity to try the Tilt-Xterminator, included with the telescope.

This mechanism is a huge improvement over the old RedCat design, which required disassembling the entire imaging train for every micro-correction.
Now, adjustments can be made externally, precisely and intuitively, without touching the camera or filter wheel — an enormous advantage, especially with full-frame sensors where even tenths of a millimeter matter.

After just a few minutes of micro-adjustment, I achieved perfect field flatness.
Subsequent frames confirmed the correction: stars were round and symmetrical across the sensor.
Clouds then interrupted the night, but over the following days I gathered a complete dataset on M31 — the Andromeda Galaxy, an ideal subject to evaluate sharpness, field curvature, chromatic correction, and illumination on a bright, wide field.

Stellar Shape Analysis – Eccentricity & FWHM


Results (Moffat4 profile):

  • Median FWHM: 1.223 px ≈ 2.6″
  • MAD FWHM: 0.1195 px ≈ 0.25″ → excellent uniformity
  • Median Eccentricity: 0.4876 → very good
  • MAD Eccentricity: 0.0902 → low dispersion

Interpretation
The FWHM map shows consistent sharpness across the entire sensor: minimum 1.15 px at the center, edges between 1.20 and 1.30 px → no degradation at field limits.
The eccentricity map remains stable (0.40 – 0.50), indicating circular stars and no residual tilt pattern.

Conclusion
Exceptional sharpness and symmetry. After tilt adjustment, the optics perform flawlessly.

Field Flatness / Curvature / Tilt – Aberration Inspector

Observations
The central panel (M31 core) shows stars perfectly round, no elongation or astigmatism.
In the outer tiles, stars remain circular with only mild radial stretching (0.2–0.4) toward the center — typical of a well-corrected Petzval field.
All four corners behave symmetrically, confirming no mechanical tilt and excellent collimation.

Summary Diagnosis

  • Field curvature: minimal, well controlled
  • Tilt: absent (< 2 %)
  • Collimation: excellent, consistent with FWHM/Eccentricity data

Conclusion
A flat, stable field across 36 × 24 mm — the UltraCat 76 is fully compatible with modern full-frame high-resolution sensors.

Chromatic Correction – RGB

  • Center
    Stars appear white, neutral, and pinpoint, even around the bright core of M31 → excellent optical alignment and apochromatic correction.
  • Edges & Corners
    Color and focus remain consistent. No blue/magenta or yellow-green fringing observed.
    Only the brightest stars in the extreme corners show a slight bluish tint, fully acceptable for a field of this size.

Conclusion
Color correction is outstanding and uniform: the UltraCat 76 behaves as a true high-end apochromat, ideal for pure RGB work and natural-color imaging.

Illumination & Vignetting – FlatContourPlot

Analysis
Illumination is highly uniform, with only 15–20 % edge fall-off, excellent for an f/4.8 Petzval on a full-frame sensor.
The center is perfectly symmetrical, with no hotspot or diagonal gradients.
A few soft dust motes appear (upper-right / upper-left quadrants), caused by small particles on filters or protective glass, easily removed through calibration.

Conclusion
Vignetting is well-controlled, illumination even and centered.
The optical train is well aligned and perfectly suitable for large-format sensors.

Final Summary
Comprehensive testing confirms that the William Optics UltraCat 76 achieves top-tier optical and mechanical performance:

Parameter Result Rating
Median FWHM 1.223 px (~2.6″) ★★★★★
Field Uniformity (MAD) 0.12 px ★★★★★
Median Eccentricity 0.49 ★★★★★
Curvature / Tilt negligible ★★★★★
Chromatic Correction apochromatic ★★★★★
Vignetting 15–20% symmetric ★★★★★

 

Overall Impression

The telescope behaves like a modern, evolved 5-element Petzval: a perfectly flat field, neutral color rendition, and pinpoint stars.
Setup and collimation are simple thanks to the new Tilt-Xterminator, which allows quick, accurate sensor alignment.

Paired with the ZWO AM5N mount, the telescope showed excellent tracking stability and ease of operation, fully exploiting the precision of the optical system.

In conclusion, the UltraCat 76 is a compact yet professional instrument, ideal for deep-sky wide-field imaging, high-resolution mosaics, and full-frame sensors.
Beautifully engineered, it stands confidently among far more expensive telescopes, small but with the heart of a true celestial predator.

M.31 LRGBHaOiii by Simone Curzi

A full-resolution version is available on my AstroBin page, along with cropped regions highlighting the UltraCat 76’s crisp detail, contrast, and color control.

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