I've got a 7 nm 2" Baader Ha
filter and have tried it with various combinations of solar filters and ND filters to see what I could see. Visually or with a Canon 30D camera set to colour, you get a red circle.... The number of colours available on a dig camera is not enough to show up much in photos. Maybe you can use photoshop to streach out the colours? Set to monochrome, you get to see a little bit more, but not a lot.
Basically, the bandwidth of these types of Ha filters is not enough to cut out all the 'noise' light around the Ha line and all you see is what you would see in white light, but it's red. You need at least 1 nm to see something decent, and really less than 0.7 nm for it to be really good. When you get down to 0.2 nm, well, you can see everything. But a 0.2 nm
filter is probably worth (or rather costs) more than every bit of camera gear and astro gear I have, plus my car thrown in as well.
The best way to see something useful is to get a Coronado PST for $800. These have a ~1 nm
filter and show up a reasonable amount. The problem with these is that they are fitted onto a 40 mm f10 telescope, so the maximum maginification is about 100 (and that's pushing it) and you really need more than that.
So.... one possibility is to rip it apart (gently!) and use the good bits and attach them to a better telescope - eg a ED 100 f9, preferably better. Now you can get about 200 or 250x or more with a better scope. As it's now putting through more light, you will need to either stop the scope down a bit (or you will fry the
filter and/or your eyeball) but that brings you back to square 1, so the other way is to use a ND
filter and/or a dark red
filter over the objective so that you still have the aperture but only a similar amount of light to the original 40 mm coming through. I also used a IR/UV cut
filter to make sure the nasty IR and UV are blocked.
All the main bits on a PST unscrew - if you are careful and use a bit of muscle. There is heaps of red glue on the threads to try and stop you from doing that...
I had someone machine up an adapter so that the thread on the PST body fits onto my telescope. You will need to experiment with tube lengths and focus etc.
If you want to use the PST bits for photography (and for best visual results as well), you need to make sure the focus is outside the tube and eyepiece holder thingy - with the standard PST you can't take photos as the focus is too far inside the eyepiece thingy. You can get around this by unscrewing the eyepiece thingy and removing the bit closest to the main body. BUT be very careful as the eyepiece thing (with the plastic knob on it) will now touch the prism inside the main body. You need to put a spacer in (about 2 mm) to stop this from happening and scratching the prism.
Have a look at
http://www.astrosurf.com/re/pst_dism...0060617-01.jpg and
http://www.astrosurf.com/re/sun.html - almost down to the end of the page.
I'll put up some photos of what I have done with my PST - one day!