MGTechDVP
19-05-2015, 12:08 AM
Hi all,
Been a while since I posted anything, I had nothing worth showing.:rolleyes:
The weather was hopeless here lately, when it did clear up for a while it was around the full moon time... :mad2::cloudy:
I spend a 9 nights across April and May trying to capture subs in between clouds coming and going. I ended up with 4.5 hours of 300s ISO400 subs through the Baader Neodymium and 25.5 hours of 1800s ISO400 subs through Baader HAlpha, Sulfur II and Oxygen III. Only 8 subs were needed for HAlpha since IC2944 is bright in Ha, but the reminder of time was used to capture SII and OIII, roughly the same amount of time on both.
I'm stoked with the end result, I dare say that this is the clearest and best of my images so far... :party:
The Subs were captures using a full spectrum modded Canon 40D.... who said that DSLR is no good for narrowband. :shrug:
The telescope used was the Bosma 80mm f6.25 refractor, on the CGEM mount, processed in photoshop, diffraction spikes added using "Astronomy Tools" PS Plug-in.
Thank for looking,
Mariusz
Been a while since I posted anything, I had nothing worth showing.:rolleyes:
The weather was hopeless here lately, when it did clear up for a while it was around the full moon time... :mad2::cloudy:
I spend a 9 nights across April and May trying to capture subs in between clouds coming and going. I ended up with 4.5 hours of 300s ISO400 subs through the Baader Neodymium and 25.5 hours of 1800s ISO400 subs through Baader HAlpha, Sulfur II and Oxygen III. Only 8 subs were needed for HAlpha since IC2944 is bright in Ha, but the reminder of time was used to capture SII and OIII, roughly the same amount of time on both.
I'm stoked with the end result, I dare say that this is the clearest and best of my images so far... :party:
The Subs were captures using a full spectrum modded Canon 40D.... who said that DSLR is no good for narrowband. :shrug:
The telescope used was the Bosma 80mm f6.25 refractor, on the CGEM mount, processed in photoshop, diffraction spikes added using "Astronomy Tools" PS Plug-in.
Thank for looking,
Mariusz