Quote:
Originally Posted by citivolus
If I were composing the shot, I think I would take the objects up just a bit in the frame. Left to right is good, as you don't want to lose the cluster. You seem to be using a good field size/focal length for this pair.
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Thanks Eric, I agree about the composition. However due to the flattener not flattening, I had to be careful not to get the cluster near the corners.
Quote:
Originally Posted by strongmanmike
You've gotta be happy with that for an unatended image run, very nice
I am too chicken to leave my NJP and AP alone while I sleep..I must be paranoid? I do go inside and surf the net but I have to check on things every 20min or so, even if just to check my subs for any errors that might mean I have to take another in its place..?....  Seriously though without an accurately trained temp compensating focuser I get focus shift and I like to refocus every 30min, I think this ensures the highest quality focus throughout an imaging run.
The other night I must say I did 5 hrs of imaging on one object and the average dy/dx guide errors were around 0.15pix or +/- 0.3" the whole time!!...still checked on it and refocused every 30min or so though
Mike
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Thanks Mike - I was like that to start with, but now I have to trust that it's doing the job properly. Once or twice I've woken up and come out to PHD guiding beeping at me because of a lost guide star due to clouds. But sleep was necessary after all those clear nights we had! Unattended imaging is perfect when it all goes right!
Quote:
Originally Posted by EzyStyles
great shot mikey. you must be happy with it. using the w.o focal reducer gave you such a widefield with the ed80? is it free of coma or did you cropped abit around the edges?
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Thanks Eric, I'm very happy with it. Your DSLR shots are amazing motivation and set a very high standard to aspire to.
The W.O reducer/flattener gives me a focal length of 480mm (f/6) instead of the native 600mm. It's slightly cropped around the edges, but only to account for the slight rotation in each frame after stacking.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ghsmith45
I had the same problem when I used the WO field flattener with my ZS110. You get a nice wide field, but have to do a whole lot of work to round up the stars.
Nice pic to get these two together.
Geoff
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Thanks Geoff - the W.O can be very annoying. The first few times I used it I never had the seagull stars in the corners, now I get them often. I need to experiment more with placement, tightening of screws etc, to find the combination where it actually does flatten the field.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jase
Lovely Mike. Composition and processing look spot on. Well done.
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Many thanks Jase - and thanks for your brilliant image to use as inspiration and guidance while processing. I was trying to get more pink/red in the middle of the lagoon but I was wondering whether the lack of H-A in my captures was the cause - or just lack of exposures.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tornado33
excellent work there Mike. I will give it a go in a month or 2 when its higher, the east is right over inner Newcastle and heavily light polluted
Scott
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Thanks Scott, much appreciated. I'm really looking forward to giving it another go when it's up higher. I just couldn't resist it when I was looking for targets at 3am, to take me up to 5am when Jupiter was high enough
Quote:
Originally Posted by Alchemy
Nice mike, you are coming along well with the deep sky stuff, you must be happy with that one. 
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Thanks Alchemy, I am very happy with it. I feel like I actually know what i'm doing in processing now, instead of just adjusting levels and curves and hoping for the best
Quote:
Originally Posted by Garyh
The large version looks beautiful!
great work from LP`ed Newcastle

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Thanks Gary. I'm actually south of Newcastle by about an hour. My east sky isn't too bad luckily. I've got Newcastle to the North, Gosford to the SouthWest and Sydney to the South so neither of those are great.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ric
Lovely capture Mike, I always enjoy widefields of this area, they always make for a spectacular image.
Well done.
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Thanks Ric - I was very pleased when I took the first test shot for composition and saw that they fit in the field.
Quote:
Originally Posted by h0ughy
so where is the planet? LOL nice work Mike
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It came later, I posted it in a separate thread.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rodstar
Now that is why the M8/20 area of the sky is my favourite out of the entire heavens!
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You're not wrong, Rod. So much going on. That whole area is new to me for deep-space imaging, so it's going to be like a kid in a candy store picking and choosing targets when it rises a bit higher.
Thanks for all your comments, much appreciated.
I've still got an Omega Centauri and NGC6231/surrounds to process.. hopefully soon!