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cometcatcher
27-10-2016, 02:48 PM
NGC1360 or Robin's Egg Nebula lies in a pretty starfield in the constellation of Fornax. NGC 1360 was discovered in January 1868 by the German astronomer Friedrich August Theodor Winnecke. Distance is roughly about 1500 light years.

It was a bit cloudy last night but managed to get 99 x 30 second subs. GSO 10" F4 Newtonian, Baader MPCC MKIII, HEQ5 Pro unguided, Pentax K-5, in the new observatory.

First time I've imaged this. Didn't even know it was there. :P

graham.hobart
27-10-2016, 02:51 PM
that is very Nice Kev.
Thanks for sharing :thumbsup:
Graz

lazjen
27-10-2016, 06:22 PM
Nice little nebula. Thanks for sharing - always good to see unusual stuff. :)

el_draco
27-10-2016, 07:14 PM
exquisite !

glend
27-10-2016, 07:44 PM
Very nice Kevin, i must have a go at this one day.

topheart
27-10-2016, 08:29 PM
Eggcelent!
Thanks,
Tim

silv
27-10-2016, 08:44 PM
Happy Easter :) :)

really pretty!
And unguided with 30seconds AND a Pentax, too!
I am going to bookmark this.
For future Beginner's questions - and the mandatory shocking answer: "you will have to plan for guiding and CMOS camera pretty soon, too."

One does not have to.
Not even with an overloaded HEQ5.
10" on an HEQ5, unguided... what a marvellous outcome at 30 secs. unbelievable!

really awesome!

gregbradley
27-10-2016, 09:18 PM
That looks great.

Greg.

RickS
27-10-2016, 09:26 PM
Nice catch, Kevin. There are some small Ha rich features if you're ever after a bigger challenge :)

Cheers,
Rick.

Peter Ward
27-10-2016, 09:44 PM
Great resolution.

Is the image cropped?

Atmos
27-10-2016, 09:55 PM
Very nice grab Kevin, always at awe what you manage with 30s subs. At least they're not out of your kitchen window anymore haha

cometcatcher
28-10-2016, 12:00 AM
Thanks Graham!



Thanks Chris. I like some of the less shot objects as well.



Thanks Rom!



Thanks Glen! Looking forward to your image.



Haha! Thanks Tim!



Thanks Very much Annette! The HEQ5 is already overloaded so no guiding for the 10". Technically, bare bones the GSO 10" F4 is about within weight spec of the HEQ5, but of course any added accessories and it goes over. I will work towards saving for an NEQ6 next.

In Mackay, we don't get long between clouds. 30 second subs means I can shoot in the gaps.

Astro camera would be good, one day. But I'm still having fun with my DSLR's.



Thanks Greg!



Thanks Rick! Yes I see that on some photos. And I did think of adding some Ha from the modified D70, but some (most) nights I'm just lazy. ;)



Thanks Colin! Smaller scopes were no problem, but the 10" was a real pain out the window lol.

cometcatcher
28-10-2016, 12:03 AM
Thanks Peter! It's only cropped a little bit to trim off the dithering overlap. It's probably 90% of the frame.

Shiraz
28-10-2016, 06:21 PM
lovely image Kevin - what an attractive object.

cometcatcher
28-10-2016, 08:54 PM
Thanks Ray! It's in a nice starfield too which helps.

Tony_
29-10-2016, 01:28 AM
Nice image Kevin!

Good detail.

I've tried this one twice at f/10 - I'll try it at f/6.3 next time, should work out better. You get some good results with that reflector at f/4.

Tony.

strongmanmike
29-10-2016, 08:50 AM
Was this taken during your honeymoon :question: ;)

Nice result Kevin, this is one of those subtle objects that makes one wonder.... :thumbsup:

Mike

cometcatcher
29-10-2016, 11:58 PM
Thanks Tony. I find DSLR's really like fast scopes.



Hehheh, oops. I've been bad. :scared3: