Quote:
Originally Posted by glennp
Hi all from outer Sth East Melbourne.
Im new to the hobby.
Ive tried the physical - standing next to the telescope and peering into the eyepiece - but i dont know what i am looking for - or at!
I have a Meade ETX125 and a laptop. My goal is to set the scope up on the tripod outside and view the stars on the laptop - and of course drive it from the laptop. I want to use some software to help me point the telescope at things of interest.
I would like to see colour pictures on my laptop, but ultrafine astrophotography is not a goal for me. I just want to see things!
I am looking at buying a Meade DSI 2 to fulfil this goal.
Can I put some questions to you all.
Im told the Meade DSI will do the job - but it is at the higher end of the price market. What other options are there for me?
Ive seen people modifying webcams for the purpose - but when I say I am not that technically skilled, I really mean it. Can I buy a webcam or similar for my purpose already set up ready to screw in?
I also would really like an experienced person to provide some 1 on 1 tutoring for a few hours - are there any locals interested in earning a little money to help me out in this?
Looking forward to your advice.
GP
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First point you need a planetarium program such as starry night , it comes in several versions even the lower ones will show you the messiers and rotation of the sky with common objects planets etc
Second point ETXs can come with an autostar controller which will goto lots of objects once you do an alignment
you will be limited with what you can see LIVE on your laptop as the pics you see in the deepsky section are often long exposures ... and then lots of them stacked. there are specific video cams such as gstar ex and such,( not a big fan myself) if you are doing some exposures start with shorter times first, alignment will play a big role here , and whether or not its mounted equatorially to track the star movements... most of those type of scopes are ALT AZ (up and down ) and in a long exposure things will rotate.
the focal length of your scope plays a big part for pictures as 400-600 is consdered short and best for beginners and probably 1500 or more is long and more for the experienced
if you can get to a club thats probably your best bet.
in the meantime post all your questions you will get an answer eventually.