Once dark I ran through alignment on the AVX mount with Mirach as the last calibration star, and I immediately noticed NGC 404, Mirach's ghost, pretty bright oval with a bright central core. It is an isolated dwarf lenticular galaxy around 10 mly distant, just outside our local group. Off to a good start.
I then went through mostly galaxies, and I was very impressed with what I could see. I had the sense I was seeing in the C8+NV what I had seen with my 20-inch from much darker skies.
IC 342: a soft, moderately large round glow, seen best with gain turned down low. I sense some swirling effect in the mottling, especially near the center bright stellar core, but it is very subtle. NV does not do well with face-on galaxies.
NGC 891: This was very large, a bit more than the FOV, and very ghostly, seeming to float in the dense field of stars. Faint, long, with a prominent dark lane down the center.
NGC 910 group: Just a half degree to the southeast from NGC 891 is NGC 910 and friends, a string of five brighter NGC galaxies, plus a couple more very faint and small NGC and MCGs. 910 was the brightest by far, then leading north like breadcrumbs were 911, 909, 906, and 914 off to one side. These all appeared as small elliptical glows in various orientations.
NGC 80 group: Another cluster of galaxies of which I saw eight: 80, 83, 90, 93, 79, 85, 86, 96 all as small elliptical glows, except for 90 which was slightly mottled and round.
NGC 772: This is a disrupted spiral and appeared so: a bright core off-center to a diffuse comma-shaped halo with a long bright arm, which I could clearly see, to the north. Smaller, fainter elliptical NGC 770 was close by to the southwest.
NGC 200 and others: Another string of galaxies, this time seven in the field of view (193, 204, 199, 194, 200, 198, 182), all pretty bright oval and round glows except for 199 which was smaller and fainter.
AGC 426, Perseus Galaxy Cluster: when centered on NGC 1272, I can see more than 15 galaxies in the field with direct vision, and a few more with averted vision. Several bright ones, then smaller non-stellar glows appear. This view more than anything convinces me the night vision device really does triple the effective aperture! This is Albert Highe's "Birthday Cluster" which is familiar to many TACOs.
NGC 1023 / 1023A: One of the more dramatic galaxies seen. Very large, bright, very long arms extending beyond the FOV, and swirly dark nebula around the core. The eastern tip had a brightening which is elongated at a slight angle than the main galaxy, this is 1023A, its satellite galaxy. Too bad Jamie wasn't there to have a look!
It was at this point I remembered how night vision does particularly well with flat galaxies, so I pulled out Alvin Huey's Flat Galaxy Observing Guide and observed some I hadn't looked at before:
NGC 100: Lovely long galaxy at least 8:1 NE-SW, with a bright central core and a halo which gently tapers to very fine tips. Vmag 13.9, size 5.4 x 0.6'.
NGC 522: Small but bright, with a very bright core and long tapering tips, 6:1 NE-SW. A string of 3 fine stars just north of the galaxy. Bmag 13.9b, size 2.7 x 0.4'. Did not notice IC 102.
IC 194: Difficult, very faint, small but very extended streak nearly N-S, slightly brighter round core. Mag 15.2p, size 1.4 x 0.2'.
IC 176: Very difficult, extremely faint, needed to check the star pattern in the guide to locate it. Small 4:1 E-W glow with a very faintly brighter core.
NGC 973, with IC 1815 in field: 193 looks like a smaller version of NGC 891, edge-on and bisected by a dark lane, 6:1 NE-SW, Mag 13.6p, size 3.7 x 0.6'. IC 1815 was a small out-of-round glow with a brighter core.
NGC 1110: Extremely faint, needed to play with the gain setting to detect it: weak glow NNE-SSW, 5:1, very slightly brighter central region and diffuse, very faint tips. Mag. 15.0 2.8 x 0.5'
NGC 1145: Fairly easily seen, in an "L" shape asterism of three equal magnitude stars, 6:1 NE-SW, it has a compact bright core, and the halo is mottled -- I have the sense it is slightly inclined towards us showing some spiral structure. Mag 13.6b 3.2 x 0.5'
NGC 1163: Very faint, lays off of a triangle asterism. Brighter bulging core region quickly fading to sharp tips. Mag 14.7b, size 2.8 x 0.3'
NGC 1247: Pretty bright, very bright core, mottled inner halo, diffuse tips, 6:1 ENE-WSW. Mag. 13.5b 3.3 x 0.5'.
IC 2098: Extremely faint, small, 6:1 E-W, with a slightly brighter round core which bulges from the halo. Mag 14.5, size 2.5 x 0.2'
NGC 925: face-on barred spiral, appeared as a fairly large, faint mottled glow with a small bright core and a brighter smudge in the halo glow extending E-W from the core.
NGC 253: Probably the sight of the night: Gigantic galaxy filling more than the field of view, very mottled halo with swirls of dark nebula around the core.
* Over the last couple of years I've been using my PVS-14 night vision device with small refractors and fast focal length reflectors to view large-scale nebula. The afocal arrangement (PVS-14 with 67mm eyepiece) allows wide fields and a large enough entrance pupil to the PVS-14 to better feed light into the sensor. But I often wished I had better "image scale" or magnification to view smaller objects. If I use a shorter focal length eyepiece instead of the 67mm, there is less light fed into the device which leads to scintillation (like TV static) and spoils the view. One way to get around this is to use night vision in prime-focus mode, which fully illuminates the sensor, and the device is equivalent to a 26mm focal length eyepiece. Most PVS-14s are set-up for afocal only, but by buying a couple of special threaded adapters and taking apart the device to remove a retaining ring, I can remove the PVS-14 objective and switch in between afocal and prime focus modes -- getting the most use out of the device.