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alacant

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Everything posted by alacant

  1. Hi Stu, everyone As always, lovely detail from the fast reflector.. To get this really good, perhaps have a look at tilt, bottom left and something which resembles a distorted dew shield, top right. Any ideas? Should be easy to locate and put right. Cheers and HTH
  2. More nebula-safe stars. Alas, there are -perhaps disqualifying- dark bits. l to r ngc869, ngc884 and ngc957 in Perseo. Thanks for looking. eos700d + asahi takumar 200: ~90min, ISO800: st 1.8.527
  3. Another go. This time in the nebula-safe area of Perseo. NGC 1245 Thanks for looking. eos700d: 90 min ISO800: st 1.8.527
  4. Hi everyone Nice to see so many stars. We spend €enormous to be able to take images thereof. Then obliterate them to death! Here is HD34452 and friends in between the -not easy to avoid- gas and dust of Auriga. Thanks for looking. eos700d + Bresser-150: 90 min, ISO800:: st 1.8.527
  5. Hi You've probably hit the mount limit at the meridian. Set RA to a few minutes after. Cheers
  6. Imagine the mount head -only the mount- suspended in space with the RA axis pointing at the pole. It matters not how you keep it there. It doesn't need to be a tripod or support from underneath even. Whilst leveling the tripod does no harm, it's also unnecessary. The only time I can think when levelling may be useful is to have some sort of set-up reference if you tear down end of session. But then again, you're going to align anyway so .. Cheers.
  7. If you're good at -e.g. eBay- auctions, there are good alternatives. The Zeiss and Takumar 135mm perform well. OK, you don't get f2 but hey, for around €50 they give very good results. Here's an example we took with the Zeiss. HTH
  8. Hi I think it's fair to say that the 75-300 isn't perhaps the best lens Canon have produced. As the lens does not focus all colours at the same point, a focusing mask will not give the best focus. With the lens set to AF, decide on focal length and leave it there. Depress the shutter to focus centre frame on the moon. That will get you close to infinity. Back to MF. To refine it from there (difficult), centre a bright white star. In live view at x10, twist the focus so that the halo just disappears. Sirius is good. Depending upon where you are in the zoom range, the halo could be either blue or red. Your aim is to compromise between bloat and false colour. Tape the focus ring to prevent it drifting. That's the best we could do. You might want to consider a fixed lens. There are some good examples, e.g. 135mm and 200mm, available cheaply on auction sites. Cheers and HTH
  9. Hi AFAIK, it isn't. It wasn't possible for our trial version at least. Cheers **EDIT. Recommendation: for ease of processing, upgrade to Siril.
  10. Hi One way would be to swap to a f8 or slower Newtonian. I'd guess the examples you posted are from a faster ratio. To simplify the procedure, perhaps best to lose the concentre and use instead a Cheshire sight tube throughout. One with cross-hairs, even better. Remember that apart from reflection, the secondary has no optical properties. It's just a flat piece of glass. Get it somewhere close. Then leave it. By far the most important alignment is that of the primary. Be sure to read Telia's collimation myths and Seronik's no nonsense guide, both of whom outline the simplicity of a much misunderstood procedure. Cheers
  11. If the issue persists, simply 'unband' the whole sequence before registering. Then stack using a decent clipping algorithm. Siril's sequential approach is the best we've found for both the above. Cheers and HTH
  12. 600d, so no dark frames. Of any sort. Simply calibrate using a constant bias of 2048. +1 for a 15 pixel dither between frames. HTH
  13. Ah, ok. So all you need to do is add an 'aux mount' entry so that phd2 knows where the telescope is pointing.
  14. Hi We use Siril only for calibration and stacking. Cheers
  15. Remove the camera to mount cable and connect the mount to the computer using this. It's a lot of extra software to have to manage, so if you're satisfied with your (very good as it is) guiding, stay with the old st4 simplicity and just get your automation app to reset the calibration after each mount slew. Make sure though to have several replacement camera to mount cables on hand;) Or... - Install ASCOM or (IMHO better) INDI. - Install EQASCOM or (IMHO better) indi_eqmod - Make a new PHD2 profile - Rather than specify 'on camera' for the mount, choose 'HEQ5/6' or 'eqmod mount'. PHD2 --> Help --> Contents:
  16. Sorry. i forgot to post the image. This is the detail I found. Cheers
  17. Hi I wish my test images came out as well! If applied, the flat frames don't appear to have worked so not so easy to process but loadsa detail, even for just an hour. Cheers and good luck at camp.
  18. the log confirms this: So you must calibrate after each mount slew; new target and/or meridian flip. Recommendation +1 as @Starflyer: lose the on-camera cable and connect the mount to the computer with an eqdir cable. Much easier. cheers and HTH
  19. Hi Duplicate the card which you know works and update the duplicate. Use the latter to test and report success/failure/logs back to the developers. Remember that it's a community project. The more we help and contribute, the... etc etc... Cheers
  20. Hi. Start again perhaps? 1. Connect to the pi via VNC. 2. Delete the profile you currently have 3. Lose indi web manager. 4. Make a new profile and leave the 'Mode'as 'Local'. 5. Do not select Auto Connect. Instead, connect each device from the indi control panel. This step will help decide which if any of the devices or driver's are faulty. Use VNC until you have it working. All should then be fine. You can experiment with Auto Connect and client-server remote stuff later. Cheers and HTH
  21. If that's all you want to do then the simplest way is one of these: https://a.aliexpress.com/_EuPqCxF Unscrew the eyepiece adapter from the focuser ring to reveal the male thread. Lenses: we use 55, 135, 200 and 300mm. All are ok on a sa. Be warned however that the 'best' ones cost a fortune. HTH
  22. Hi everyone Third time lucky. We never had good enough seeing to get the cluster resolved to any acceptable extent until last night, which was of course coinciding with full moon. it reminds me of the two clusters accompanying both m35 and m38. Wikipedia has this at 1 billion years old, so maybe that's why the stars are orange. Or maybe because we're viewing through the dust of 16000 ly. More thought provoking than pretty; the moonshine was horrendous. Thanks for looking and do post if you've had a go at this. 700d @ ISO800 2 minute frames
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