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gregbradley
09-10-2008, 05:37 PM
I shot some LRGB colour of the Tarantula using the Tak BRC 250 and Apogee U16M camera 2 weekends ago at my dark site.
A very appropriate image from my dark site as there are quite a few large Tarantula Spiders there! (they are striped like a tiger).

I have now added this LRGB to my previous bicolour (Ha O111 blend) image of the Tarantula.

It is now about 7 hours worth.

http://www.pbase.com/image/104292003 1200 x 1200 pixels


http://www.pbase.com/image/104292309 4000 x 4000 pixels (13mb).

Greg.

iceman
09-10-2008, 05:39 PM
That's an incredible image, Greg. You must be pleased with that!

gregbradley
09-10-2008, 05:46 PM
Thanks Mike.

Yes I am happy with it.
I am very happy with this setup of the Tak BRC250 and the Apogee U16M camera, they are a good match.

I also have a FLI Microline 8300 on its way in a week for Galaxies with the BRC. I am hoping it will also be a good match. 8.3mp in a small chip with high sensitivity, low noise with excellent cooling and electronics. There are some exceptional products on the Astro market these days.

Greg.

multiweb
09-10-2008, 06:35 PM
Mate the high-res version is just superb :eyepop:. So many stars. Just makes you dizzy :thumbsup:

Bassnut
09-10-2008, 07:22 PM
Its a cracker Greg, nice one. You got the colour balance right I think, the core really is not at red as it might seem close up, given the outer neb is red on this image. I found it hard to balance close up.

Your rig combos are now all fairly wide field, I liked the narrow field images you posted on yr RC, its a shame, but thats just me :D. The BRC does give awesome results I must say.

The new Planet Wave offereings look interesting for the price, have you looked?, what do you think?.

gregbradley
09-10-2008, 09:43 PM
Hi Fred,

I have a FLI microline 8300 on the way. This is a small chip camera so it should give the same image scale as the RCOS but at F5. So I should be able to capture galaxies etc like the RCOS did but at F5 which suits my situation.

I drive 3.5 hours to my dark site and unusually this year the weather has often been poor for imaging as compared to last year when it was often clear there.

The Planewave CDKs would be my next choice for a scope. The 17 inch would the one as it is F6.8 whereas the 12 inch is much like the RCOS 12.5 but perhaps slightly smaller micron resolution. It is also a truss which I would prefer to a tube as it is less likely to be wind affected. My site is often windy. The RCOS sat in the back of my car too many times because it was windy and therefore a waste of time. It suits somebody who lives at their dark imaging site and can spend the hours needed to accumulate the data.

Corrected Dall Kirkhams seem to be all the rage now with Peter Ceravolo making an F4.9 or F9 12 incher (basically he seems to have used the BRC250 as his inspiration for design).
But it is very expensive and F9 requires a 2nd corrector which are over US$2000 each.

Deep Sky Instruments make RC's now. They sell a 10 inch one for US$4995. These are the same optics as the RCOS astrographs for twice the price. They are F7.3 and a 14 inch version is planned.

The other scope that seems hot is the A&M 14 inch RC. Carbon fibre truss RC from the Italian manufcaturer. I have seen several stunning images from those scopes. The focuser I believe is still being perfected.

Orion Optics claim to make several versions of high end scopes but it appears none are in the hands of customers yet and seeing how ASA behaved it would be smart to let them prove themselves.

I almost bought an ASA 12 inch but flushed out the fact from the seller that it was still defective when I pressed him about sample images. Bruce Karbal has been trying to sell a "fixed up" 10 inch ASA now for a few months with apparently no takers. I guess the message that ASA scopes are not what they are marketed to be has gotten around.

There are lots of great choices around these days for high end gear.

As Mike has pointed out before 1200mm is probably the most useful focal length for overall imaging. I also like the FSQ. Long focal length imaging doesn't really suit my scene as I concluded that to get optimal results you need very long total exposure time. I like Mike cannot invest 15 hours in a single image with travelling to my site and uncertain weather in between work times. So F5 it is for now. Perhaps later a remote controlled CDK17 inch on a Paramount in a new observatory built for it. But not for a while.

I have my name down for an Astrophysics 400mm Mak Cass should Roland start producing the prototype he unveiled this year. Now that is long focal length and would suit the ML8300 camera perfectly.

Greg.

leon
09-10-2008, 09:48 PM
Greg, I suppose it is OK, :whistle: maybe a bit of this, and a bit of that... , sorry mate just stuffing around, :lol: it is an awesome image, 7 hours very well spent, nice work. ;)

Leon :thumbsup:

Bassnut
09-10-2008, 11:14 PM
Ecxellent review Greg, thanks.

Ric
09-10-2008, 11:14 PM
Hi Greg, that is a wonderful image. Clear, detailed and spectacular.

Very enjoyable to view.

winensky
09-10-2008, 11:40 PM
Thanks for this wonderful image. I second Fred re. the outstanding colour range and the way it represents the different emissions as you work your way out from the core.

strongmanmike
10-10-2008, 06:36 AM
Of course you do! :rolleyes:



Ah huh! I knew it! ;)



And you will have all of them at some stage huh? :lol:



Ah sigh...I shake my head :eyepop:


Nice work on the Tarantula mate :thumbsup:

h0ughy
10-10-2008, 07:59 AM
gee thats a nice image. Very inspirational

RB
10-10-2008, 10:44 AM
Greg that is just beautiful !

sjastro
10-10-2008, 11:03 AM
Excellent Tarantula Greg.

Steven

multiweb
10-10-2008, 06:41 PM
Hey Greg, how many scopes and cameras do you have? Sounds like you don't need santa claus. You're it! :lol:

gregbradley
10-10-2008, 06:49 PM
Thanks for the compliments and yes I am an equipment junkie!!

Although there are others worse!

Greg.:lol: