Hi again Игорь,
More infos related to your questions:
Weather. AstroCamp current observatory has about 60-70% of clear
nights during the year (see attached spreadsheet, and a 2000 official
report, unfortunatelly in Spanish), with a the heavier rain season at
spring (May). Today site is at 1650m height, but we could a new
terrain at 2100m, power and telecom are still pending, although
depending of your interest we can accelerate this. Seeing conditions
are from best (0.4 arcsec) to worse (2 arcsec) with and average below
1 arcsec. You can get seeing forecasts from the site at:
http://www.meteoblue.com/en_GB/point/forecast/tab/b/6/c/es/f/33476(see attached screenshot for today, reaching 0.64 at 21h local time).
Normally, you can get meteo data and AllSky WebCam (this page is for
internal use, as access observatoy web directly: astrocamp.no-ip.org,
while general public access through
http://www.global-rent-a-scope.com/gras-spain-skydata/ to avoid
saturate observatory traffic).
Current users have achieved great results. For instance, Dr. Christian
Sasse made a record with a CDK 17" to detect a magnitud 26,9 galaxy
near the QSA J1148+5251 (mag 23.1). See more at:
http://www.flicamera.com/faintest/index.html,
or perform GRB's light curves
(
http://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/gcn3/11253.gcn3), or even make amazing
astrophotography (
http://www.manuelj.com/), so they are very much
satisfied with the site.
I attach you also, an spreadsheet of standard hosting prices, but
again, knowing more about your project we can try to get the best
proposal for you.
Finally, Pedro Duque
(
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/duque.html) contact you
previously as one of our honour AstroCamp team member. He's astronaut
that flown in Soyuz (he speaks fluent Russian) and Shuttel to the
space and he has his own 50cm telescope also at the site.
Hope to hear from you soon and get your research program joining
AstroCamp in the future,
Regards,
Agustin Nuñez