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Peco4321

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Posts posted by Peco4321

  1. Thanks for that. The problem I have I think is the 13 year old canon 1100d, there seems to be a line on images that I have to overly process out making images very dark.   
    I think I will go down the route of an astro cam, to later be used as a guide cam when more funds are available. I’m quite taken with all I’m reading on the Altair GPCAM3 290c. 

  2. So it’s been a while since I’ve been on here, apologies, life tends to get in the way!  Here’s where I’m at, I have £300 currently saved to spend on my upgrade path. My backstory is:
    Skywatcher 150p, eq3-2 enhanced motors canon 1100d un modded, upgraded to Heq5 pro late December. 
     

    Main interest is DSO imaging, but also lunar and planetary when possible. So my thoughts are to one day go down the guided route but not totally convinced I’ll gain enough as my processing skills and software are limited anyway. I’m thinking of a dedicated astro cam maybe or clip in filter and dew heaters etc etc. Later in the year I’ll have more funds so this is a staged approach. 
     

    What would you do?  Here’s some of my recent images that I’m proud of that I’d like to improve on now I have a good mount, based on your advise of what else I could throw in the mix as well. 
     

     

    3F8E492B-C0CA-48A4-845F-FC5BE915BF7C.jpeg

    DA1D4591-D4C4-46D4-933F-B9EF6C726955.jpeg

    266E56A2-C74D-4658-AA81-9E2F98CB6AEF.jpeg

    44EBCA57-57D7-4088-8F01-1A82C933A778.jpeg

    D52DB1E9-611E-46DE-9A4D-EB4460B68DC0.jpeg

    FE8767F3-C796-43B8-87A8-3E5E25C115B2.jpeg

    AD85BB76-BD9F-42B5-8D98-CE36117996AC.jpeg

    • Like 2
  3. Like others say, it’s fine not to go out. I do get it though, the feeling of a lost opportunity when it’s clear, especially on a weekend or a night when you don’t have to be up early the next day. I’ve found if I force it, it’s a bad session, clumsy alignment, basic errors setting up and frustration trying to find your targets.  

    Tonight looks great, but it’s my wedding anniversary tomorrow, I’m off work for the week, and I’m torn between setting up or not bothering so I’m not tired tomorrow. I know what I should do, so I think I’ll just give it a miss. Camping in North Yorkshire later in the week so time for a bit of wide field imaging. Hopefully I’ll match last weeks picture of our tent at night. 

    Whatever you decide, don’t beat yourself up, winters on the way.  

    5B2DCC0D-AA04-4875-B7D9-2380BD084430.jpeg

    • Like 4
  4. 20 hours ago, M55_uk said:

    Peco, I am guessing these images are after stacking etc. from your 60sec clip. Would be useful for beginners like me if you could post one such clip here so we can see the before and after.

    Sure, I’ll do it later when back home. Typically they are 25-45 sec exposures, plus bias frames stacked in DSS and stretched in GIMP. I would say they are only about 30-60 minutes worth, as I've  said I know my limitations so adding hour after hour of data does not make significant differences to my images. 

    Its a great feeling when you first start with DSS, moving the sliders to bring out the detail from what at first sight was a picture showing not much at all, gets me every time. 

  5. 58 minutes ago, Alan White said:

    terrified of trying imaging

    Thanks for your kind words. It still amazes me that a humble set up, extremely limited photography skills and light polluted skies in East Yorkshire can give me images of things trillions of miles away. 

    Don't be terrified, get a t ring for your camera, about £15, attach it, trial and error, you’ll have deep sky images in no time.  

    • Like 1
  6. 12 minutes ago, M55_uk said:

    Peco, those are lovely pics. Is this with just the SW 150P and Cannon 1100D? What eyepiece do you use (if any)? I am a newbie too so would be interested in viewing these at this level of detail; if not photgraphing them.

    Cheers. All deep sky stuff is using the camera attached to the scope at prime focus, no lens or Barlow. Take multiple images with the tracking motors running and stack in DSS. 

    • Like 1
  7. 2 minutes ago, Ships and Stars said:

    Holy smokes Peco, wonderful photos! 

    Thanks. I’m totally self taught as well, with loads of help from this site in the early days obviously. There is nothing more satisfying than trying to star hop to where you think a dim DSO is located, hope for the best and start imaging. I’ve been at this hobby for 4 years now, just wish the skies were darker in my town. 

    So to anyone getting into this, I again stress that expectations are the key, you get what you pay for but that doesn’t mean entry level equipment cannot bring great enjoyment. 

    • Like 3
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