Quote:
Originally Posted by Atmos
It looks pretty good Ray, mostly just lacking data but another night or two would fix that.
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thanks Colin - yep need more data, but the #$%@ clouds disagreed.
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
Very impressive Ray. You must have copied some of Eric's data! Sorry, not funny.
Very sharp and detailed and I love the colour. I can see some star "fuzz" that I associate rightly or wrongly with small well cameras. So close to the formula here. Perhaps back off the gain a tad more to protect the stars more or you will have to use star masking almost from the start of your processing.
The core is nice and intact though. You probably also have some tilt as the centre stars are nice (except the brighter ones with some edge fluff) but they are off the further out you go.
Greg.
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thanks Greg - naah nothing nicked from anywhere. I will have to do something about the diffraction patterns around the stars - the primary mirror has 6 clips holding it and they spray energy around. In addition, the secondary has a small ding (covered with black paint) that throws a diffraction highlight near one of the spider pattern.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RobF
Whoa, that's a seriously good first "serious" image. Up there with the best M83s, not a quick first effort.
More please! 
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thanks very much Rob - appreciated
Quote:
Originally Posted by strongmanmike
60s exposures huh...? and not that many either, Wowee  and a fine image to boot  ..Gee back in the day, we would admire someone who eyeball guided a 2hr exposure  ...I only did it once  and after developing it, the negative showed it was out of focus  and needless to say the guiding was rather dodgy  ...never again
A new age of imaging....?
Mike
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Thanks Mike. Could be the start of a new approach - still a place for CCDs, but CMOS is getting there and has amazing low noise.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Placidus
Superb! Beautiful colour. Ok, glorious colour. Background galaxies look great.
Lovely contrast in the dust lanes too.
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Thanks very much M&T - I was not too sure about the colour and appreciate the feedback
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Ward
Like the colour. Resolution is good. Lovely highlight and shadow. Nothing to dislike really.
Nice one  
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thanks for the positive comments Peter - appreciated.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Retrograde
Looks great Ray. I suspect you're going to be very happy with the camera.
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Yep, happy so far Pete. The only downside is that hundreds of 16mp subs can take a while to process.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bugeater
Wow. Very nice.
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Thanke very much Marty!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul Haese
Nice work Ray. Detail is very nice and I like your star colour. Not 100% a fan of the galaxy colour, but it still looks good. Back ground has a quite a lot of noise left in it. It looks like colour noise but could also be noise in the luminance, so while it might be a lower noise camera I think with short subs and stretching some noise amelioration is going to be needed. That aside though, the sensitivity of the sensor is clearly obvious with 60 second subs compared to those that I do with the STXL of 20 minutes. My f ratio is quite slow but not that slow.
Resolution is very similar to mine. Watch out you'll be accused of pilfering an image too. It seems a 10" scope can trump a 20" too.  
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Thanks Paul. The smaller pixels help with scale and the short subs definitely give a resolution advantage. Noise is still an issue, but most of it is shot noise from the sky and no improvement in camera noise will affect that. Just need more than 3 hours (particularly on blue - I only got a handful of usable blue subs).
The theory says that all good scopes from about 120mm aperture on up should have similar resolution in "good" Australian seeing - I suspect that might be the case when you look at what Lee is getting from his 120mm. The big scopes get lots of photons though and that is a real bonus.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rustigsmed
great first light Ray. camera is looking the goods.
looking forward to seeing what happens when you crank the gain and shorten the subs (and apply some flats).
are you going to hold onto the 694 chip?
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Thanks Russ. In two minds what to do with the 694. It is still a wonderful camera and am pretty sure that it has the edge in QE, so it will outperform the 1600 in some types of imaging. For now, will hang onto it until I am sure that the 1600 does things well enough that I can bear to part with the 694.
Quote:
Originally Posted by trent_julie
This is an impressive step forward. I would like to see a side-by-side KAF- 8300 vs ZWO 1600 image.
I would also love to see what I could do with this chip and a small refactor.
Thank you for documenting your efforts to date.
Trent
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Thanks Trent. Apart from image scale, I think that an 8300 should produce similar results to the 1600, but it will require very much longer subs to do it.
I guess that the 1600 should do well with a smallish refractor, provided the refractor is well corrected and has a flat field. It would probably be a killer chip on the FSQ106 or TV101 and the skywatcher APOs also look suitable