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twobleak

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  1. Some fantastic images in here; taken me a few days to get through the whole thread I have been thinking about picking up the Skywatcher AZ GTI mount and attempting some of these shots myself... I was wondering how I would go about attaching my DSLR and lens to the mount though? Assume some kind of L bracket would be needed?
  2. What could I have done wrong? I did not change much in DSS, just went with the recommended settings.
  3. Wow that was quick! Thank you. I wasn't sure if I should save that as 16bit or 32bit - only two options I can see in DSS when saving as a FITS file. Would it make much difference if I posted the 16bit output from DSS? It wasn't that the image was dark, more that my attempts at stretching in PS were all looking rather ugly. I couldn't get anything close to what you posted above. I'm glad there is something in the data though and that I'm not doing too much wrong on that side of things. edit: no flat frames - not got to grips with those yet.
  4. I've attached the FITS file from DeepSkyStacker, if anybody wanted to take a look...I had several tries at stretching the image myself but it did not turn out very well. sadr.FTS
  5. Excellent, thank you. Yes, it is indeed the region around Sadr. I stacked 100 of these, 20 darks and 20 bias and like you say, I can see some faint nebulosity in there but my final image is really not all that. It wasn't even an hour of data so perhaps that isn't long enough or my post-processing is at the bottom of a very steep curve!
  6. Hi All I'm still rather new to imaging so I wanted to get some advice, if possible...Attached is a RAW file from my DSLR shot at ISO 640, 25 seconds and I think at f4. Is this just too bright to begin with? I'm trying to find a good starting point...No moon but under Bortle 5 skies. Thanks L_0005_ISO640_25s__NA.CR3
  7. Interesting topic as I've been wondering the same after recently starting out with some night sky photography. As a few other posters have mentioned, here in the UK, the more dangerous aspect is probably driving out to some locations. I managed to have three different near-misses with muntjac deer on the back roads of Essex in just one night! They just wander out into the road and then appear to have no idea in which direction to run off.
  8. Thank you both for the replies, that gives me some peace of mind that the lens and my technique are not all that bad! Can I ask what you did to correct that in software? I did notice that once I had stacked all my shots (around 50 or so) in Sequator, the odd star shapes noticeably looked a lot better.
  9. Hi All I recently picked up a Samyang 16mm f2 for my Canon 90D and I was trying out some test shots at f2.8, iso 1600 and 10 seconds. I believe this length of exposure should be short enough to avoid star trails, but looking at one of my images closer I can see what looks like trailing or possible coma issues (or both) - I'm not quite sure really. Could someone offer a suggestion as to what I might be doing wrong or is the lens not a particularly good copy? I have attached a TIFF - just a straight export out of Lightroom. Thanks. IMG_8930.tif
  10. Camera is in bulb mode, so I'm only using the intervalometer to control the exposure time.
  11. LENR is off, drive mode is single shot - no self timer. For example, this works fine: 10 second exposure, 4 second interval, 3 shots in total This doesn't: 10 second exposure, 3 second interval, 3 shots in total (shutter opens at the start of shot one, but does not close again until the intervalometer has finished counting down). I have no idea why that might be. Camera setting or intervalometer problem? I seem to have ruled out most things but I'm lost now.
  12. I did initially think that, but surely you would expect the shutter to close after the first shot still? I could understand subsequent shots then being missed but for the shutter to not close after the first shot seems odd to me. I am using a Sandisk Extreme Pro SD card and you can see the camera has finished writing to the card after about a second.
  13. I recently picked up a Neewer intervaolmeter for my Canon 90d and whilst it appears to work fine, I have an odd problem when setting the interval to anything below four seconds...the shutter opens but never closes until the intervalometer has counted down all the shots. Anything above four seconds and it appears to behave normally. Im a bit confused! Am I doing something wrong or is there a minimum interval time I cannot go below? I have tried all different combinations of exposure length and interval time and the only consistent problem is with an interval shorter than four seconds.
  14. Thank you, I will take a look at that.
  15. Thanks so much for looking. I did also import the raw files into Lightroom and some of the lights had to be rotated left to get them back into landscape orientation - I have no idea why though. I then run another stack through Astro Pixel Processor and this does look a lot better (one corner appears to suffer from clouds/light pollution the most), could the orientation of the images (and then the clouds) have a big impact on the final image?
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