Thread: M8 and NGC253
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Old 05-10-2011, 09:01 PM
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peter_4059 (Peter)
Big Scopes are Cool

peter_4059 is offline
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: SE Tasmania
Posts: 4,574
Quote:
Originally Posted by RickS View Post
A fantastic result under those conditions!
Thanks Rick. I will have to pay more attention to light pollution from my own house in future having seen the sky background plot of the subs.

Quote:
Originally Posted by atalas View Post
Two great looking shots Peter! well done.
Thanks Louie

Quote:
Originally Posted by ozstronomer View Post
Peter both shots look great, ngc253 seems to be on target ATM. I have an hours worth of the same to process.
Looking forward to seeing them this weekend Geoff.

Quote:
Originally Posted by troypiggo View Post
Really impressed both of those. 253 is great, plenty sharp and detailed.
Cheers mate. Everything seemed to come together for a change.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jjjnettie View Post
Terrific stuff Pete. 253 is amazing.
Thanks JJJ. That old silver coin is a great target

Quote:
Originally Posted by allan gould View Post
Nice ones as usual Peter. Good to see those from suburbia.
Thanks Allan.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bmitchell82 View Post
Nice photos Peter, you have got the 10" starting to sing

As for your guilding and what alot of people miss/ don't understand is that the calibration is extremely important. Unfortunately most people go woohoo its calibrated i must be able to guide everything perfectly now. *insert game show your wrong buzzer here*

Polar alignment affects your guiding calibration
Wind affects your guiding calibration
Bad seeing affects your guiding calibration
Flexure affects your guiding calibration

So you see you may not of changed anything but.... you may have gotten things just a little bit better in the alignment/seeing/wind/flexure.

I use maxim so its very easy to see the effects of everything happening and i will not accept the calibration unless i get a near perfect "L" shape. If you get that "L" shape that means that the software knows exactly what angle the camera is on, and more importantly how far to move the mount to correct alignment. As for PHD and the like, if your star ends up perfectly back in the center ever time your guiding will be very good. if it doesn't your guiding will be average at best!

Brendan
Good food for thought Brendan. I'll have to pay more attention to what PHD is up to in future.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Lester View Post
Very nice images Peter. Thanks for the views.
Thanks, glad you liked them.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jjjnettie View Post
Agreed Brendan.
Even a light breeze can set things a flapping. The importance of having all cables and straps secured can't be emphasised enough.
A good guide star helps tremendously. But when the seeing is bad, if you slightly defocus the guide star, it helps to prevent the guide program from "chasing the seeing".
Sometimes though, a recallibration is the only way to set things straight if the first sub gives you eggy stars.
Thank god for vercro
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