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Everything posted by Laurin Dave
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Esprit 120 - flattener & reducer?
Laurin Dave replied to Neil27's topic in Discussions - Scopes / Whole setups
You'll need either the 1x flattener or the 0.77x reducer/flattener with that, depends on what camera you have /fov / sample rate you want ... £196 or £299.. -
Very nice Goran, the Ha really lifts it.. Do you know what's causing the Bhatinov Mask like spikes on some of your brighter stars? @tooth_dr had similar on one of his recent images taken with the same camera Dave
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Antlia 3nm Pro narrowband filters
Laurin Dave replied to Backyard Space Dude's topic in Member Equipment Reviews
Interesting comparison and quite a difference .. I’d guess that the big halos in the Oiii are reflections off the filters with the smaller artefacts being caused by microlens/sensor window reflections -
Adapter for ASI294 and SW Esprit 100 scope
Laurin Dave replied to Astrokev's topic in Discussions - Cameras
If new it comes with 11 mm and 21 mm T2 spacers and a 16.5mm T2 to m48 spacer which with the 6.5mm camera back focus gives 55 mm -
Adapter for ASI294 and SW Esprit 100 scope
Laurin Dave replied to Astrokev's topic in Discussions - Cameras
Do you not have the 8mm thick M66 to M48 DSLR adapter? This is usually screwed onto the flattener and takes it to 55mm required backfocus and ZWO cameras come with the necessary extension tubes to give 55m -
General Discussion on Filters for Deep Sky Imaging
Laurin Dave replied to teoria_del_big_bang's topic in Imaging - Discussion
For further comparison here is another Rosette shot last Saturday night from Bortle4/5 in the UK and with the Moons at 76% and near the Hyades.. 20x 1200s , Astrodon 5nm, Esprit100, SX46 (Kaf16200 ccd) Mesu... luckily the Rosette is bright. Somewhat lower SNR than Olly's but still pretty good.. If the Baader really is 4.5nm then it ought to be pretty close to the Astrodons.. With your Oiii and Sii filters if you do get halos there are processing methods to mitigate them including of course StarNet., there are plenty of excellent SHO images around that weren't taken with Astrodons or Chromas. Also you might find, like I have that you much prefer imaging in "natural colour" .. Dave -
General Discussion on Filters for Deep Sky Imaging
Laurin Dave replied to teoria_del_big_bang's topic in Imaging - Discussion
Despite having numerous Astrodons in both 1.25" and 2" I'd agree with Steve.. save your money and put it towards that new ASI2600/QHY268 mono camera... I would expect that the absence of any microlensing artefacts around bright stars will be far more noticeable than any improvement you might see from using Astrodon NB filters. Dave -
RGB not parfocal, what hope for luminance
Laurin Dave replied to Tommohawk's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
That might be a side effect of microlensing with the camera o.. in my experience its worse with Lum, but is dependant on exact scope/reducer/filter configuration, -
RGB not parfocal, what hope for luminance
Laurin Dave replied to Tommohawk's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
HI Tom I've just checked my M45 and the Blue nebula is RGB 20:30:40 or thereabouts... What scope and camera are you using? Dave -
I'd agree ... look at the newer CMOS cameras which do not suffer from the microlensing (which I believe the Horizon does) and which also have higher QE.. alternatively you might pick up a bargain CCD as folk switch over to the 455/571 chips, there was an Atik KAF8300 on here last week at a very good price and there have been KAF16200 cameras about too .. the 10 or 20 or 30 minute subs required with these are not an issue with the Mesu ... although cloud always can be... Also the Esprit120 can do full frame ... Dave
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RGB not parfocal, what hope for luminance
Laurin Dave replied to Tommohawk's topic in Imaging - Deep Sky
If the filters aren't parfocal then I'd expect that the FWHM you get with the luminance filter will be worse than the individual RGB filters, how much worse will depend on how well or poorly colour corrected the scope is.. It will be in focus though, or as in focus as it can be. Also if you are shooting LRGB then generally it is best to shoot L when the target is highest/the seeing is best and the effects of the atmosphere are at their least. Also I'd have thought that the photons that come through to constitute your luminance will depend on the colour of the target.. you can see this by looking at an unstretched RGB image eg in a random sample within the core of M42 the RGB ratio of a Red bit is 80:25:35 and a Blue bit 30:32:38... HTH Dave -
Moon slowly drifts out of view ??? MESU
Laurin Dave replied to kirkster501's topic in Imaging - Discussion
I've wondered about this too... just Googled it and Don W says both @PhotoGav and @tooth_dr suggestions work but that the 'track object' in Skyview only works for Moon Sun and a couple of planets (doesn't say which ones) Dave -
Hi Adam I'm using Darks and 100 Gain and it seems to work fine.. I suspect that for bright stuff that Darks are somewhat optional although you'll need to use them or bias to calibrate flats. SGPro shows as B&W .. its a bit alarming at first Dave
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Hi Olly Based on what it managed to do on Steve's data the Pixinsight Photometric Mosaic script might be worth a try on this, the script could use your wide field M31 RGB and Lum data to remove complex gradients from the high res panels.. HTH Dave
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Steve kindly sent me his data so that I could try out the new Pixinsight Photometric Mosaic Script that I mentioned in an earlier post. I already had an M31 taken with my Esprit100/SX46 which captures nearly all of Steve's fov in one frame. After registering everything together using Pixinsight's Platesolving and Mosaic by Co-ordinates scripts I firstly used the script and my M31 data to remove the gradients from Steve's higher res data, I then used the script again to combine the High res data as a mosaic and finally again to pad out the high res data with a wider star field. The resulting L and RGB images were then processed in Pixinsight and Photoshop.... Here's the result.... not perfect with a number of joins and other artefacts visible if you pixel peep but otherwise speaks for itself and the power of the the new script.. Great detail from the Esprit150 too.. Dave Edited 19Jan21.... reprocess to remove the magenta halo which in my rush to post last night failed to notice... also added a version with Ha data With added Ha jewels..
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Does your scope have a Riser between the Adapter and the Focuser? Have a look on the Starlight Instruments website to see what these are .. the Riser is basically a tube that puts the focuser at the correct distance .. if you have the flattener this should screw onto the focuser draw tube direct (via what’s known as an End Cap).. so the configuration would be scope.. adapter.. riser.. focuser.. end cap.. flattener.. spacers.. camera HTH ps I don’t think the Skywatcher reducer will screw into the Starlight draw tube ..
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That's very good, excellent considering how new you are to all this. Well done Dave
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I’d just give it a go Andy and see what you get.. btw a larger fov will make gradient removal easier
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And its free! I cant see why you 'd lose any detail on your target Andy .. your image scale will be 0.8arcsecpp but you'll be seeing/mount limited any way Dave
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I'd just use your 268 and crop your images if needed, however you'll often find (as I do with my Esprit150 and APSH chip ) that there are numerous smaller and not so small galaxies in the fov which give interest and context, also there are various galaxy groupings where the native 268's fov of view would work very well... eg Markarians Chain and neighbours .. Leo Triplet .. M81 M82 and neighbours