MilwaukeeLion Posted December 19, 2015 Share Posted December 19, 2015 ED-80TCF - Neximage Burst Color ccd - 2 x barlow - (ICap settings = gain 495 - exposure 1/156 sec - brightness = 0 - 25 fps - moon focus) Happy to catch a few frames, ISS was traveling fast and not high altitude W-N but managed to get a few frames shortly after dusk. If I open clutches on EQ-G mount and turn the whole mount perpendicular (ISS is North = mount polar scope pointing east), its quite easy to manually track ISS with illuminated cross hair reticle. I tried the settings a member posted here for a Newt as my icap settings. I think my gain for this set up was way too high and not an ideal camera for the task, but it produced some nice fuzzys regardless. Going to try 3x barlow next time, mess with gain and star focus instead of moon. Maybe try my Nikon also another member suggested rapid jpegs. Forging on toward recognizable ISS.Happy viewing !ML Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StarlightKnight Posted December 28, 2015 Share Posted December 28, 2015 ML A good start.Key things to get right are the focus and exposure - ie gain, brightness, gamma and shutter speed.I suggest you try 1/250 as freezing the image is very critical - I use 1/1,250 ! - but with a DMK21 at 30fps on a C9.25.Using a 3xbarlow will probably not help as you will need to up the exposure to compensate - less is sometimes more !If you stack the images only use ones that are a maximum of about 1 second apart. Be very critical when you select the ones to stack as the orientation and seeing changes very quickly - individual images are often better than the stacked onesHappy huntingDon Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Uranium235 Posted December 29, 2015 Share Posted December 29, 2015 Looks like a bunch of tie fighters in orbit! But well dont for having a crack at it, as its not something I have the gear (or the skills) for Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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