Quote:
Originally Posted by omegacrux
I was looking through the latest Sky at Night and they compare a few filters and o3 hardly makes a difference so I want something that can see the horsehead neb or is that something that 20 hours of camera can see and not our eyes ?
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Well on a large number of targets and under dark skies in a medium to large aperture telescope an OIII filter will be the best filter to use. An OIII filter knocks out more of the background stars than the other filters but on certain targets, particularly some emission and planetary nebula it is the best filter because it provides the greatest increase in contrast. Magazine reviews can sometimes be very subjective and not give you the full story. What targets did they do the comparison on, what telescope(s) did they use and how dark were the skies? To give you some idea where I am coming from some years agao they did a comparison of 8mm or thereabouts eyepieces. The Vixen LVW came out as the overall winner with a 90% rating ahead of the 7mm Pentax XW with an 87% rating. Now I can guarantee you having used both eyepieces extensively, while the 8mm Vixen LVW is an excellent eyepiece, it is not the equal of the 7mm Pentax XW in just about every performance aspect, yet they rated it on top. What is funny is that Vixen UK is the largest advertiser in The Sky at Night.
No filter will allow you to see the Horsehead (Barnard 33) in your 6" achro refractor. You really need a 14" plus aperture telescope and very dark skies. The DGM NPB helps on this target but is not as effective as a H-Beta filter. The best all round general purpose filter for visual deep sky observing for your scope will be the DGM NPB filter.
Cheers,
John B
Cheers,
John B