Thanks mostly to this forum, i've been encouraged to take up a little imaging.
Last night, after much reading, I started my first attempt at drift aligning a telescope. Much to my surprise, after about an hour, I was able to get a mount that took about a minute to move off the 9mm reticle line. Not too bad I thought for someone who can't see closer than 40 degrees to any horizon.
So, whacking the camera on the scope, I proceeded to do my first manual guide photo over sydney city, and ran into my first interesting problem.
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y77...0885Medium.jpg
I was pleased that even with a modest 85mm lens, I was able to keep the stars as circles on this f/2 shot at 90 seconds with little correction. Question number 1: is that well and truely sky fog in that shot, or have I done something else wrong? I don't have any filters at this point, so is there anything else I can do? Shoot at a smaller aperture, take many 30 second shots and stack them? Just give up until I can get to a dark sky site?
The second attempt was more challenging. Mounting a 500mm mirror on the camera, I found the next challenge being to focus the thing. A bunch of 10 second exposures got me this one (full size 500pixel wide crop of original frame):
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y77...901cropped.jpg
Obviously, Jupiter itself is overexposed, however any less and the moons don't show up. Is the solution to this to mix long and short exposures?
This was taken at 9pm last night (after a 29 degree day at an elevation of no more than 30 degrees over the building opposite) so the seeing wasn't exactly great. It is however a great inspiration to me that I've managed to produce an image of something!
So, what am I left with? Are these things that will improve with practice or should I give up now? Can I reduce the effect of sky fog by using longer focal lengths (narrower fields) or does this have no effect at all?
At this point, dark sky sites are out of the question due to other commitments and i'm taking the opportunity to practice even in the lights of a big city centre so that I might know what i'm doing if I ever do get out to a dark sky site. Thanks in advance for the criticism.