Beren,
Quote:
Originally posted by beren
Ditto , sharp and clean ....just when i think the LPI is limited someone has it smoking :}
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My thoughts... which kinda answers the above replies & comments.
The key to detail is, focus and evaluation.
I spend allot of time on it before I start capturing an image. It is not uncommon for me to spend and hour on focusing before I'm happy, in some cases even longer. It's a long and tedious task that will have you pulling your hair out but it is well worth it, and I cant say enough about it. Also you need to walk away from the monitor your focusing the image on to rest your eyes. You might find what looked good then looks crappy when you get back to it.
You need to try an find focus when the moments of good seeing hits the sweet spot. This is what takes time and timing. But can save you a whole heap in post processing, trying to fix it.
Then when you start capturing whack the evaluation level up to 80-85% or even 90%. Your machine might chug along for some time before it captures something and then you might only get one or two frames, then chug...chug...chug...again before it collects more. But what you do get is good data from the moments of good seeing. Which is better than going through every image and tossing the nasties before stacking...
Bad frames don’t contribute to an image they degrade it and that’s anything less than 100%. Even then when the software does the actual evaluation process prior to capturing it only selects from the best capture to base it's evaluation on. So watching the monitor closely for moments of good seeing to start capturing, I feel can help up the anti in the evaluation process.
If you can, avoid using the filters in Autostar they're a bit hit and miss.
The other Jupiter I posted all I did processing wise was run the levels tools across it as I felt the original looked a tad over exposed.
Kindest Regards, Clear Skies