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ollypenrice

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Posts posted by ollypenrice

  1. 2 hours ago, Louis D said:

    The Ford Fiesta name is a blast from the past here.  They were discontinued in the US after the 2018 model year.  I never did see very many of them in Texas, despite the name sounding like it would have been a favorite among Hispanics, they tend to favor full sized pickup trucks to double as work vehicles.  The Ford Fusion was about as small as most Americans wanted to buy.  It has also long been discontinued in the US market.  Ford hasn't sold any sedans in the US since well before the Pandemic.

    After a five week cycle tour down the west coast I hired an American Taunus which looked like our Ford Mondeo of the nineties. Then one day a stylish, but smaller, sedan pulled up alongside and I thought, 'That looks vaguely familiar.' Then I realized that it was a Jaguar XJ6, and that my 'Ford Mondeo' was a monster compared with the European Mondeo of similar shape but not size. Clearly my sense of scale had been 'Americanized' during my stay!

    :grin:lly

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  2. 1 hour ago, TiffsAndAstro said:

    Thanks both. Putting hyperstar on a edge hd gives me Rasa like speed and focal length though, so in theory I could switch between full focal length for galaxies, x 0.7 that with a reducer and then like f2 with 500mm ish with a hyperstar? 

    I'm certain it won't be that simple as I've heard reference to mirror flop and other difficulties, but I'll look into those. Also cost but I'm ignoring that for now :)

    My experience of operating an F2 system - in this case the RASA 8 belonging to Paul Kummer, is that when you have it giving tilt-free, collimated images, you will want to touch  nothing, ever, under any circumstances!

    You are not (believe me) going to say to yourself, 'Well, having spent nights under the stars and days on the bench with a tilt jig to get this close to right, I think I'll just tear it apart for a quick visual pop at the moon tonight.'  In my estimation, only a minority of users report success with the Hyperstar and, of those who do, none of them swaps back and forth between configurations.

    Reality is a terrible thing.

    :grin:lly

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 1
  3. 1 hour ago, TiffsAndAstro said:

    Looking for reasons why, at sometime in the far, far future, an Edge HD would be a terrible idea for astrophotography?

    Yes will need better mount and oag or maybe that weird looking zwo 2 cameras for the price of 3 ;) camera thing. 

    But it looks like a good flexible scope with maybe Rasa conversion for just £1000 more ?

    The RASA isn't a conversion, it's a dedicated astrographic telescope. There is a Hyperstar conversion for the standard SCT, though.

    In terms of what they do and how they do it, the standard SCT and RASA are at opposite ends of the scale, one long focal length and one short. The RASA 8, for instance, does not compete with an 8 inch SCT, it competes with a refractor of about 80mm, since both have comparable focal lengths.

    The argument against the standard SCT for imaging is that you can usually reach the resolution limit of the seeing with a focal length of only about a metre. Pixels have become small enough to make this possible. This gives you the option of a far wider FOV for other targets while capturing all the detail you're ever likely to manage in anything.

    Olly

    • Like 2
  4. 4 hours ago, Rodd said:

    The data set is compromised somehow, which is not unusual for data from there.  I’ll have another go at it and see if I can get the wrinkles out 

    Maybe 8 hours without luminance just isn't enough with the 11 meg Kodak CCD. It only has a 50% QE.  I've done hundreds of hours with this chip and like it in all sorts of ways, but it isn't fast. I'd always shoot luminance on a target like this.

    I wonder how the data are calibrated. On mine it was best to use a bad pixel map and a master-bias-as-dark.

    Olly

  5. 3 hours ago, andrew s said:

    While I admire the thrift of sgl members would not buying new have rewarded the author for his excellent work?

    Just a thought. 

    Regards Andrew 

     

    Fair point. My Kindle edition cost a tenner (in £) and will partially reward the author as well as helping Bezos maintain his minor-continent sized yacht.

    Monique and I are now wary of buying second hand books online because, unless they are hardbacks, we risk finding the font too small to be legible, even using magnifying specs.

    One of the few things I miss, living in France, is the chance to browse second hand bookshops in which you turn up random, but fascinating, reading material. How else would I have come to read I Sailed With Chinese Pirates by Aleko E Lilius, or Kabloona by Gontran de Poncins, or Ice Palaces by Anderes and Agranoff?

    Olly

    • Like 1
  6. On 23/05/2024 at 14:23, JeremyS said:

    Yes, there are few videos of Dirac speaking in later life. I wanted to hear his Bristolian burr, that the book made much of, but it’s barely detectable to my ear.

    Norr to moyne....

    (Forgive me, I haven't been to Bristol since the eighties and my recollections of the accent are unreliable! Great city, though. One of the best.)

    Olly

    • Like 1
  7. Yes, I think that being cautious not to over-expose in RGB pays off. The higher you go in the brightness the less colour you have. It is also possible to use the RGB as a 'short exposure' set to use in layer masking short and long exposures when the target image requires this. (HDR imaging.)

    For me star removal and replacement is now an obligatory aspect of processing in which all you need for the stars is a gently exposed RGB layer. They will be small, tight and colourful. Bingo.

    Olly

    • Like 3
  8. On 21/05/2024 at 16:18, Captain Scarlet said:

    I received mine in the post today. Previously owned it seems by someone called Ruby Stockham who’s signed its inside cover.

    I’m a few pages in and already ruing the things I’m not going to get done as all I want to do is get back into the book. I’ve developed a habit as well of diverting off into Wikipedia on many things that get mentioned in passing.

    M

    I also look on Google for interviews with the authors and, where appropriate, with the subject of the book. Because authors do promotional tours there is usually an interview available and it's nice to have a better idea of who a writer is, I think.

    Olly

    • Like 1
  9. The thing to remember about our passions (I hate the word 'hobbies') is that they're not compulsory. I felt ridiculously guilty over cutting right down on my cycling but the emotional need for it had just gone. So be it.

    Enjoy the music making!  Erm, I like singing. Would you like to hear me? 😬👹🤪

    Olly

    • Like 2
    • Haha 1
  10. I agree with Elp in that it's target-specific. There is no point in chasing faint tidal tails in RGB, so put the time into the luminance. Where you're not chasing faint stuff it tends to be easier to combine the L and the RGB if you have a similar total exposure. Pixel by pixel, though, L still gives more light  per pixel than RGB combined - and that's the whole point. Time saving is the reason why the LRGB system was invented.

    My focus with Tak FSQ106 and TEC I40 did not change perceptibly between LRGB so I shot RGB, RGB, RGB etc. I also used Lum flats for everything, again with no perceptible consequences. Quite a few of our expert guests do likewise. The L channel is going to define RGB brightnesses anyway but if you do have a problem you might need flats per filter. I didn't so I just got on with it!

    Olly

    • Like 3
    • Thanks 1
  11. Re backgrounds, I wouldn't hesitate to use the 'add noise' filter on special occasions. You can feed a bit of texture into an over-polished looking background.

    Olly

    • Like 1
  12. Wow, a feisty image, Rodd, with lots to say for itself. Very impressive indeed, the main spiral looking more contrasty and dramatic than we usually see.

    One of your best in my view.

    Olly

    • Like 1
  13. 12 hours ago, gorann said:

    Why not just try an SCNRgreen and see what happens?

    Thanks, Goran. I never think to use SCNR green on non-linear images but your suggestion worked perfectly. It gave me complete control over the green-blue balance, so here it is more towards blue. I could have taken it further but I'm a believer in baby steps!

    OWL%20M97%20X%20suite%20WEB%20G%20DOWN-6

    Olly

    • Like 1
  14. 40 minutes ago, Xiga said:

    The method I used is a little different.

    I first processed the Ha by removing the stars and applying a bit more N-XT than usual. I tried sharpening it, but it was already quite faint and couldn't really take any. Then I added it as a new layer and double-clicked on the layer to open the Layer Style menu. From here, I changed the blend mode to Screen and de-selected the G and B channels. Then I used levels and Curves to really darken the Ha layer a lot, so that it wasn't affecting the sky background. Once I was happy with it, I changed the opacity of the layer to 80% and then made a copy of the layer, only this time I de-selected the R and G channels and changed the opacity to 20%. This way, I was able to weight the Ha 80% to Red and 20% to Blue, which seems to be the consensus for how the Pixel Math brigade do these things. 

    Nevertheless, I always trust my eyes over anything else, and I admit I did like the effect. It made the Ha less of a fire-engine red, and gave it a slightly magenta hue, which I really liked, so I think I'll do it this way from now on 😃

    That's interesting. The argument for adding Ha to blue arises from the fact that the fainter H-beta line, which is blue, traces the same gasses as Ha. I used to do this in the early days but seem to have got out of the habit. I'll take another look.

    Olly

    • Like 1
  15. 49 minutes ago, gorann said:

    From both out images I conclude that the more detail you bring out the less it looks like an owl🤫

    It is pretty green, I agree. I blended the OIII into blue and, in a separate image, into green then weighted them in Ps layers. I would like to have given the blue a little more weight but this dramatically lowered the visibility of the outer shell and the temptation to feature it was too strong!

    Olly

  16. 25 minutes ago, gorann said:

     

    First I process the Ha image until I am pleased with it. Then (in RGB mode in PS) I move the slider in

    I would add one caveat to this. Knowing that my Ha image is destined to lighten the red channel, I don't process it as I would a standalone Ha. I go for more striking contrasts because this will be toned down in the blend, and I don't worry about noise in the background because it will be darker than the same regions in red so it won't be applied. Also I will often give a further stretch once the Ha is in place as a layer over red and I can see what it is or isn't doing.  The beauty of Photoshop lies in its showing the consequences of what you are adjusting as you adjust it.

    Olly

    • Like 1
  17. 6 hours ago, Xiga said:

    Thanks Olly ☺️

    I had a hard time processing this. I spent 4 nights on it, and had to start over a couple of times. This was my first time incorporating Ha into a broadband nebula image. I initially spent a fair amount of time looking up how to do it via continuum subtraction using pixel math in Siril. It worked, but then I tried just adding it in PS instead and found I could do exactly the same, only with so much more control, so I went with that. It was also my first time using Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch. I'm very impressed with it. I knew it would tame the stars well, but I was worried I would lose some of the dust along the way, but it seemed to work well. 

    I continue to think that Photoshop is usually easier to control than anything else. I add Ha to red using blend mode lighten, though you can also use blend mode screen if you bring in the black point, I've read. I need to try this.

    I no longer give any thought to the stars in stretching because I'm going to remove them anyway and replace them with stars of an entirely different stretch. I also remove NB stars now, when adding Ha or OIII to the colour channels. That way they have no effect at all on the RGB stars.

    Olly

    • Like 1
  18. I haven't a clue what your unashamed cheat was and, alas, your sequence of events means nothing to me... I don't know if anyone else is any the wiser but, hey-ho, let's see!

    Olly

  19. @gorann posted a superb Owl which reminded me that I had not yet re-done mine using the x-suite software. This image has about 9.5 hours of Ha/OIII/RGB, so nothing like as much as I would have liked, but I've found more detail in the core using Blur Xt.  Recently Photoshop has added Camera Raw filters which are, essentially, from Lightroom and I think that the Texture and Clarity filters are well worth having.

    This is from my TEC140 and Atik 460 mono, mounted on a Mesu 200.

    OWL%20M97%20X%20suite%20WEB-600x418.jpg

    Olly

    • Like 11
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