Quote:
Originally Posted by Bart
With the cost and availability of CMOS astro cams with good chip sizes, why would you bother? You get a mono chip with cooling, its a no-brainer to me.
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Of course an astro-cam can be one way to go; however Ben was talking in the few hundreds of $ for a modified APSc camera with me suggesting a full frame unmodified camera for a little more at possibly $6-700 for a Nikon D600 or Canon 6D having similar Hydrogen Alpha collection potential (for the same FOV) as well as the added benefit of much lower noise.
One could go to much smaller astro-cam sensor sizes, at the possible expense of noise, but to get an astro-cam of similar sensor sizes to what was proposed (APSc or Fullframe) would cost much more: ~$3200 for the APSc Colour (2600mc), ~$2300 for the APSc Colour (071mc), ~$3900 for APSc Mono (2600mm), with full frame sensors double that at ~$6200 for the FF (6200mc or 6200mm). An astro-cam is great, especially with mono cameras and the right filters, at being capable of reducing the effects of light pollution, but there's the attendant need to tether it (or wifi) to a laptop/PC/mini whatever, with filters, filterwheels, etc..as well as the external batteries required. With a DSLR or mirrorless camera, its all in one: battery, intervalomater, exposure control, etc... and that makes for a light and easy pickup-and-go setup which many value for travel and remote location astro, which is not to say that astro-cams are not a good choice, just that they are a choice based on different user preferences and goals.
Best
JA