With the briefly improved weather I was able to spend some time at home testing and tweaking a newish addition to my scope collection.
Imaging was cut short by clouds followed by rain, the moon was up and I was imaging with light-polluted skies (inner suburbs of Brisbane) so I wasn't expecting a masterpiece, but I think it turned out OK.
Scope: Ceravolo 300 Astrograph at f/4.9 (1470mm focal length)
Camera: Apogee Alta U16M, Astrodon Gen 2 LRGB filters
Guiding: Lodestar and MMOAG
Mount: Astro-Physics AP900
There's about 155 mins of data: 35 mins Lum and 40 mins each of R, G, B. Subs were a mix of very short (0.5s for Lum, 1s for colour) and 5 mins for the rest. Processing done in PixInsight.
Nice work Rick, that scope is producing lovely results.
Stars are sharp and the field looks flat, no sign of any tilt.
Geoff
Thanks, Geoff, but you need to look more closely
Quote:
Originally Posted by multiweb
What a beauty! Someone's been splashing real hard. Should we blame you for the weather?
Thanks, Marc. I also have an AG12 sitting here waiting for first light so I'm surprised it hasn't been raining salamanders!
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
Whoa, beautiful image. Gorgeous. Looks more like a high quality APO shot than a compound scope.
That minor elongation in the very corners looks more like slightly wrong corrector spacing as its on all 4 corners.
Greg.
Thanks, Greg. The problem in the corners seems to move around. I think something in the secondary assembly is moving. Peter Ceravolo has given me some things to check and suggested some washers to increase tension in the springs that hold collimation. I think I have a little tilt as well so it's probably a combination of problems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pmrid
It's going to be a great winter if that's any indication of what is to come from that scope Rick.
Peter
It was a promising start, thanks Peter. I hope to get the Ceravolo up to Ten Chain some time soon and see what it can do under better skies.
That is one of the very few large image scale Omega Centauri images that I have seen that is bitingly and naturally sharp without being artificially sharpened due to processing. The star colours are gorgeous too.
Are you guys living in a caravan in the driveway while the house is full of astro gear
Looking good mate.
Both the kids have left home. Heaps of scope storage space, Robin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dennis
That is one of the very few large image scale Omega Centauri images that I have seen that is bitingly and naturally sharp without being artificially sharpened due to processing. The star colours are gorgeous too.
Cheers
Dennis
Ta, Dennis! I tried deconvolution and it really wasn't an improvement. I settled for an almost imperceptible wavelet sharpening but it was probably unnecessary.
Quote:
Originally Posted by astronobob
Wow, very nice Rick Winter, here you come
Thanks, Bob. Looking forward to some clear nights for all of us!
Wowser, what a rig. Looking VERY good for starters Rick
If I bump into this at 10Chain I'll just smell and listen to it all humming for a while I think
Thanks, Dave. I wouldn't have been able to sneak the expense of a new one past my darling wife but she was OK with secondhand when I told her it was just like it was on special
Quote:
Originally Posted by RobF
Wowser, what a rig. Looking VERY good for starters Rick
If I bump into this at 10Chain I'll just smell and listen to it all humming for a while I think