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Magnum

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Everything posted by Magnum

  1. its funny ive tried the pix insight trials about 10 times now but still cant make myself purchase it due to the hideous user interface and crazy workflows ( im sure it was designed by monkeys. 😛 ). or maybe im the Monkey 😛 I still do all my stacking and pre processing in Maxim DL including Gradient removal, DBE and ABE in Maxim DL, though they are called flatten Background and auto flatten background & remove gradient. and in direct comparison still give as good of a result but are much simpler to use in my opinion. Then do all the final processing in Photoshop + Noels & Annies actions plus Starnet++V2. I wouldnt mind trying this new BlurX but shame it's only available as a Pix insight plugin. 250 for pix insight plus 80 for the plugin sounds a huge amount to me just to sharpen. I will look through this whole thread and decide if I want to lay out that much as a late Christmas present to myself, but will probably decide id rather buy a new Scope or camera, as I always have trouble spending money on new software compared to new hardware 😛 Lee
  2. Brilliant 😛 spot on there Olly.
  3. ive replaced the image with a less sharpened version as it looked awful when I just revisited it LOL
  4. That an interesting and good to know, luckily by chance I have been using 5ms as my default in colour images of Jupiter and 2-3ms on Mars. Can get get that speed at any f ratio ive tried upto f25 with the 12" scope, I remember previously I had a C9.25 but always felt limited by the amount of light that could put onto the sensor so had to use longer exposures and higher gain. Since moving to the 12" scope I don't have to worry about using slow shutter speeds except for Uranus and Neptune or imaging in deep IR and Methane. Lee
  5. thanks Geof, I should have done a few captures for derotation. not sure why I didnt.
  6. If the f11 one has not been resized then yes its coming out at about f16.5 for me rather than f11
  7. Id forgot I took this wider field shot on Sept 29th of Jupiter and 3 moons close by, going out from the planet we have Callisto, Europa & IO. This was a single 2 min capture with the Meade 12" LX200GPS @ f15 with the QHY5iii462C. Moderate seeing, Kent, UK Lee
  8. Thats very good for your first methane band Geof,
  9. I dont think the pixel size made any difference as I adjust the focal length with the barlow spacing to compensate. Well except at prime focus then the smaller pixels are an advantage, come to think of it, I wouldn't mind a 1.5um pixel camera then I could do away with the Barlow altogether and lose the extra glass from the equation The main reason I upgraded was my old Altair 224 was only USB2 and was limiting my frame rate, and as I was upgrading I thought I would go for the newer sensor which is more versatile as its more sensitive in IR
  10. on the Down sides the f25 image took much longer to stack and takes up much more disc space and was dimmer so had to use higher gain, yet the final image still looks smoother to me.
  11. I found this comparison I did on Sept 4th with my old 224C, colours is slightly different between the 2 as it was only a quick comparison, and I really cant be bothered to process it again from scratch. Anyway the left image is at prime focus with my 12" LX200 but with extra spacing the disc measured 250 pixels which works out to be F13, the right image is using my 2.5x Barlow measuring 480 pixels and is bang on f25. I have enlarged the f13 image to match the f25 image size. They were taken about 30 mins apart and conditions were pretty consistent throughout the session. To my eyes the f25 image is way more refined. Ive since upgraded to the 462C with smaller 2.9um pixels compared to 3.75um on the 224C so ive dropped my working FL down from f25 to f21 now to get me similar scale. the ideal sampling maybe somewhere between the 2, but I would conclude same thing Neil said, its better to oversample than to undersample Lee
  12. That's the key point, and ive been trying to say in other threads, the top imagers capturing from Barbados or Singapore with perfect seeing can consistently use very high sampling ( some would say oversampled ), and ive also been able to gain advantage from doing that in the UK when its a perfect night, by imaging at f21-f23, but on average and poor nights I then drop down to lower sampling say f15. Some say we that ideal sampling doesnt change with seeing conditions, well in theory no but in practice it definitely does.
  13. very good result, and nice to see real world examples of different sampling, as you say being oversampled doesn't seem to be an an issue in real world use. Lee
  14. Slower than that actually. With the 462c which is the most sensitive camera for methane band it needs 100ms so thats 10fps and a gain of 400-500. Its easy enough to see the bands to get rough focus but not sure i got it spot on, here is a still from the capture to show how it looked with histogram around 40%
  15. Take 5 still frames then use them in registax or AS3 when you stack the avi,
  16. You need to use around 100ms in methane as its a narrowband fikter
  17. well in visible light yes, but in methane I only go to 40% and the histogram jumps around a lot more.
  18. I can answer regarding settings for methane band. it's same as normal capture but is a very dark filter so need longer shutter speed and higher gain, also helps to use Lower F ratio to get brighter image and that wavelength responds better to lower f ratios anyway. if using 290 mono then you will need to bin 2x2, but the 462C is much more sensitive in that wavelength so doesn't need binning. with the 12" scope I have to use about 100ms shutter speed with gain quite high about 475, using gain this high causes a quite a bit of colour noise and hot pixels to show so they recommend taking a dark frame for stacking. Chris go with his C14 says he does 12fps with similar gain. Lee
  19. Yes probably pushed it too far, that what happens when I process too late at night LOL Lee
  20. thanks, yes the colour one was much softer, so I didn't bother to process it. My CH4 filter was is only 10 or 12nm wide and was bundled with my QHY462C camera along with an IR850 and IR block, was a very good deal at £250 for the camera and 3 filters. It works but have never got much real detail to show with it but that could be because it's so hard to get perfect focus in Methane band. Christopher GO uses the same camera but he has a wider 18nm Chroma filter. Lee
  21. Mars at 23:24UTC on Nov 9th. seeing was pretty poor tonight, Jupiter was rather featureless and not worth even capturing but had a quick go on Mars before packing up as its considerably higher in the sky. Used a lower focal length than I normally do as I forgot I had removed a spacer last time I imaged as was on Jupiter in CH4. So this is at around f15 instead of my preferable f21, so had to upscale by 200% before posting. Surprisingly it came out better than I expected, probably as this camera can capture so fast at 320x240 I ended up with a massive 77,500 frames in 4 mins then stacked the best 25%. Pole is at about 1 o'clock but very low contrast in IR. Single 4 min capture @ 350 fps. Stacked best 25% of 77,500 frames. Scope: Meade 12" LX200GPS @ f15 Camera: QHY5III462C Filter: Astronomik IR742 Shutter speed: 3ms Gain: 250 Location: Kent, UK Lee
  22. Sorry I didn't type that out very well, I understand how aperture effects sampling. I didn't mean sampling of the scope I meant oversampled for the seeing, even with lucky imaging there is a practical seeing limit ( somewhere between 0.06 & 0.1"/pixel ), I know you previously said that seeing doesn't effect optimal sampling, but in practice I think the seeing does limit how high we can sample no matter how short the exposures. I may be wrong on this, im just talking from my experience. all the best Lee
  23. I don't understand why you are doing simulations, why not do it with real captures?
  24. Well you have asked the same question as I have, but my conclusion is the top imagers have already tried it both ways, and all seem to have settled on what you consider to be over sampling, if they could get as good results using the lower sampling that your calculations suggest ,then why aren't they doing that? its not like they would choose to oversample for no benefit is it? I myself have tried using lower sampling then upscaling it in post, but my side by side results against the higher sampled images are worlds apart in terms of detail. Also loss of SNR from oversampling is a non issue if using a large aperture, with my 12" scope I can still get 200fps at f24 on Jupiter and never have to go over gain 275 with the 462C sensor and the limit is the speed of the camera at that ROI not the shutter speed. So even if thats oversampled im still capturing more data than I can handle, 90 sec captures are 18,000 frames each. with Mars at the same scale with smaller ROI im getting 350 fps and 31,500 frames in 90 secs. if I go down to f15 I can max out the camera using a smaller ROI box but then the images don't look as good to me anyway so seems pointless. If using a smaller aperture scope then it would be an issue to get a decent SNR, but if I had a 6" scope I wouldn't be trying to image at the same scale anyway. Also we have to remember we can't use the f ratio number universally in these conversations, whenever I state the f number im using, it's only relevant for other 12" scopes. If I ever get 1 metre scope then f7 would be all I need to get the same sampling with the same camera, or if I buy myself a 1um pixel camera then my current scope would be very over sampled at its native f10, its all relative. The only number we should really be quoting is the pixel scale of the system, and I like to be at around 0.1"/pixel. Lee
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