I also found Procyon B a difficult target. I made several observations of Procyon in early 2001, in my Astro-Physics 10-inch f/14.6 Maksutov Cassegrain (whose name is "Gillian", based on her near-magical powers and on Kim Novak playing a witch of that name in the movie "Bell, Book and Candle").
On February 3-4, observing from Fremont Peak with an 8 mm Brandon eyepiece for a nominal magnification of 464x, I logged Procyon B as "suspected" -- the position angle was dead on, but two different ephemerides gave differing values of the separation at that time, so I ended up being cautious. My log shows that I spotted the companion as "a fleck just outside/adjoining the first diffraction ring", which is a little vague, but would put it a bit over an arc-second out from the center of the Airy disc, which -- on present reflection and after checking some things on the web today -- does seem about right. On that same night I split Sirius (same instrument and magnification), and noted that Procyon was an easier split than Sirius, though with the comment that Procyon was much higher in the sky, so perhaps was less affected by seeing. If memory serves, I may have published a report of that observation on the TAC mailing list at the time, though my own archive of the post shows that I composed it before I got worried about the separation.
On Feberuary 27-28, 2001, using the same instrument with a 12 mm Brandon eyepiece (309x), at the old Dinosaur Point site (down by the boat-launch area) I again looked at Procyon, but seeing gave no chance of a split.
On March 14-15, 2001, set up at the Montebello Open Space area, again with 464x in the AP-10, I logged both Sirius and Procyon as "occasionally split" -- the seeing was up and down. I did not record position angle or separation, which means that I did not consider the split remarkable.
Thus Bob Argyle (quoted below, after my signature) seems to have been wrong: As far as I can remember, I was alive in 2018, though come to think of it, if I had been dead at the time I might well not remember being so ...
I have split Sirius with smaller aperture -- I found it my six-inch f/8 pre-EDT Astro-Physics triplet when it was near maximum separation, and showed it to several other folks while I had it. Sue French has seen it in four inches of aperture.
Other difficult objects for me have been the Sculptor Dwarf Spheroidal galaxy and Maffei I. Note in passing that there are *three* objects in Sculptor that are occasonally referred to as "The Sculptor <something-or-other> Galaxy": The first is NGC 253, a bright spiral galaxy that Messier would surely have noted if he happened to look that way. The second is what used to be called "THE Sculptor Dwarf Galaxy" -- a ninth or tenth-magnitude (visual) dwarf galaxy that is nearly round and rather larger in angular size than the full Moon. Many sources show it as 30 or 40 arc minutes in diameter, but to me it sometimes looks larger. It is located about four degrees south of alpha Sculptor. It is now perhaps best described as "The Sculptor Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy" The problem is that presently, another dwarf galaxy in Scuptor turned up. That one is now known as "The Sculptor Dwarf Irregular Galaxy". It is about visual magnitude 15.5 and roughly an arc minute across. I have not seen it. Things are further complicated because what Sky Safari 6 (still in use by many, including me) plots as "Sculptor Dwarf Galaxy" is indeed four degrees south of alpha Sculptor and indeed has a listed magnitude of 9.51, but has a given size of only about an arc-minute: Someone confused one galaxy with the other and messed up the plot. Anyone who looks for a small bright galaxy at that position will not find either Sculptor Dwarf.
In any case, my observation of the Sculptor Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy may have been the second visual observation of this elusive object. I was at Fremont Peak on September 23-24, 1987. It was a dark night. Someone else was there with an early Astro-Physics 130 mm F/6 triplet, and I had a 10x70 binocular. I had looked for the dwarf gaiaxy before, and had probably seen it but not realized it, for reasons that will become clear in a few sentences. I had long since given up trying, because I had gotten to know the star field in the area too well and so was likely to deceive myself, but in the time since my last attempt I had forgotten the detailed star pattern and only remembered that the galaxy was about four degrees south of alpha Sculptor. I suggested we search for it. We deliberately underpowered the 130 mm -- I recall we were using an eyepiece that gave about a 12 mm exit pupil, which wastes light but guarantees that the surface brightness of objects on our retinas is maximized. I scanned for a while and found a ghostly glow at the right point. While my companion was looking, I tried my binocular, but background light from the night sky was distracting, so I pulled my jacket up over my head, leaving only the binocular barrels sticking out. I looked like a cross between the Headless Horseman and the Guns of Navarone, but -- there was the galaxy. I have seen it a dozen or so more times in various apertures -- I once logged it as "convincing but marginal" in a 10x50 binocular. A problem seeing it is that unless the actual field of view is considerably wider than the galaxy itself, the apparition looks like vignetting. It has no sharp edges: If you have it centered in (say) a one-degree field, what you see is a barely detectable centered broad soft glow that slowly fades toward the edges of the field. So if you are chasing down this object with a that kind of magnification, the trick is to move the telescope and note that the glow does *not* stay centered -- it is fixed on the sky. Bingo. The Fornax Dwarf Galaxy is similar but easier.
I observed Maffei I from Fremont Peak on February 2-3, 1981, using my Celestron-14 at 71x, 122x and 196x. There was no fog in on the coastal plain below, but even so, the sky was dark enough to see evening zodiacal light. At my plotted position, I logged a few arc-minutes of hazy glow with about ten foreground stars, which fits photogrqphs that I have subsequently encountered. My problem finding it was that it is in a star-rich part of the sky, and I needed a rather deep image of stars nearby in order to locate the field precisely. There were published photographs of the area -- I recall some in _Sky_&_Telescope_, I think it was -- but they had no plate scale, no indication of what way was north, and were not taken in visual wavelengths. Fortunately, I had a friend in an astronomy program at UC Berkeley (I was working on my physics PhD there at the time) who was able to point me a more useful images. Without them I would probably have had no luck.
Hmn, other toughies I have chased down are the jet in M87 (Celestron-14, lots of magnification, it's tiny and close to the core of the galaxy-- this is one of the few deep-sky objects that requires diffraction-limited seeing for a good view), and an elongation , but not a clean split, of the gravitationally-lensed quasar images that make up Einstein's Cross (C-14 again, use considerable magnification). And oh, yes, Deimos and Phobos, in the AP-10 with the 8 mm Brandon, during a very close Mars opposition. And I can't claim credit for chasing it down, but there was that one time at Bumpas Hell in a Lassen Star Party when the ISS briefly flashed through a medium-magnification view with my C-14, and for a fraction of a second I could see girders and solar panels.
-- Jay Reynolds Freeman, Deep-Sky Weasel
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Jay_Reynol...@mac.com
http://JayReynoldsFreeman.com (personal web site)