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sacredblack
14-01-2008, 04:41 PM
Hi,

Just thought it was about time I introduced myself. This seems like the best place.

My name is Steve Roberts and I've been interested in Astrophotography the day I first saw Orion through a borrowed old Tasco telescope, complete with wobbly tripod.

I finally took a step closer to being able to learn and start experimenting with Astrophotography last year when I purchased a Meade 10" SN. It's been a great scope for observing on the relatively few nights that I've been able to view but I've recently come to the realisation that the scope is overly heavy for the tripod. I originally had ordered a 8" SN but stupidly accepted the larger based on availablilty not price. I imagine that once I've mastered the Astrophoto skills I'll need to upgrade but I suppose that's all part of the game.

A couple of weeks ago I started trying to do a Southern Polar Alignment using the drift method and have had minimal success. It turns out that I really didn't know what the sky was doing as compared to the scopes movement. The site I was using last week only had a small window between trees looking directly up, towards the east and also some view towards the north west. I'm starting off using a 35mm camera and Fulji 200 slide filem as I only have a compact digital that can't do more than 15 secs plus it's frames are really noisey due to heat sources in the camera.

During this time I took a few wide angle shots of the night sky. During the shots I had to adjust every 3 minutes or so. I've added a few LED's to the end of my finder scope to aid in the guiding. I'll hope fully modify it a little more to make it solid. Interesting to see what they look like. The site is reasonably dark and there was no moon. I'll have to wait until the film is used up though. Damn.

All said and done it's a great challenge. And I look forward to another week of Drift work. Back home here in Blackwood I have a reasonably wide area of sky to work with and I should be able to master (maybe apprentice) the Drift alignment.

My background is in music nowadays. I was once in visual effects and timelapse filming. I've released several albums of music and on my last release included a DVD which has a track of timelapse including some all night long sequences using the noisey camera previously mentioned. You can have a low resolution look here http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=rigkKVqXJxU

Long term I'd like to do some high quality Astrophotography using a good DSLR camera which will crossover into timelapse.

So hope I didn't bore you. I've already found so much information on here it's been fantastic. Patience I am not good at but with Astrophotography I have no choice.

Thanks again and I'll hopefully have some really silly question soon as well.

Cheers,

Steve.

chunkylad
14-01-2008, 05:30 PM
HI and :welcome: to the crew Steve.

We have some world class imagers here at ISS, with lots of experience to help you on your way, so I'm sure you guys will find something to chat about.

Cheers:thumbsup:

Dennis
14-01-2008, 05:30 PM
Welcome to IIS Steve - what an entrance!

Thanks for the link to your time lapse video – I really enjoyed the spectacle. A lot of serious planning, field craft and sheer hard yakka has obviously gone into this and you have succeeded extraordinarily well.

I enjoyed the subtle panning of the foreground terrain; this added more dynamism to the clips rather than having the foreground simply static. Some of the more threatening cloudscapes were very dramatic indeed.

The “over the horizon effect” was more noticeable on the dawn clips than the dusk clips if I’m not mistaken?

The constant, low key background music was very nice but maybe some more dramatic sound effects would have added to the atmosphere for the more dynamic, threatening storm cloud clips.

Terrific job, a very enjoyable viewing experience.

Cheers

Dennis

edwardsdj
14-01-2008, 05:40 PM
Hi Steve.

I'm sure you'll be able to do some photography with your 10" SN. While the mount might need upgrading for deep sky work I'm sure that things like prime focus photography of the moon, piggyback photography and webcam photography of planets would all be well within the reach of this setup.

Drift alignment isn't hard when you get the hang of it :)

fringe_dweller
14-01-2008, 06:59 PM
welcome Steve, loved the vids/soundtrack, flinders ranges i am guessing?

you'll fit right in here!

gotta love the CD Baby site too, great site for unsigned independant people such as yourself! some cool stuff on there

Ric
14-01-2008, 09:30 PM
Hi Steve and welcome to IIS, that was a great time lapse vid.

Cheers

ballaratdragons
14-01-2008, 10:07 PM
Nice effect! Great images! :thumbsup:

Wierd seeing Crux turning backwards at the start though :scared:

sacredblack
15-01-2008, 11:22 AM
Thanks to all for saying hi !

Also thanks for the comments about the videos. Regards Crux going the wrong way - funnily enough nobody had mentioned this before but if anybody was going to then an Astro Forum was going to do it.

Also nice to know that the LXD75 is going to keep me going for a couple of years at least doing astro stuff.

Since the moons just started to get in my way (I need a ND filter badly) I thought I'd work on a new power supply unit.

I made a simple illuminator for my finder but didn't use any diffusion hence I got four (used four LEDs) different locations for the crosshair depending on the angle that I looked through the eyepiece. That makes it hard. I'm going to look into the projects on this site to make a mod.

Thanks again. I hope I can answer peoples question one day.

Cheers,

Steve.

sacredblack
15-01-2008, 11:33 AM
Oh yes that is the Flinders Ranges in most of the shots.

Steve.