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Old 19-07-2010, 11:46 PM
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Mirror mirror on the wall which is the finest DSLR of them all?

After the Malin Awards I decided to broaden my imaging and do some more DSLR imaging.

My question is I would like a top notch DSLR and I am wondering if a Hutech style modded camera is really able to be used also for terrestial.

I have a 20D with the clear mod. I also have the Xnite CC1 filter for it and have taken both infrared and colour images with it. I suppose I should review the colour ones to see if they need additional processing or if they are a bit off.

So what is the consensus on which DSLR is the finest around.

Is it the Canon 5D Mark 11 or the Nikon D3 or its variants?

Or the Canon 1Ds Mark 1V?

Also which lens is the best.

I already have an older EOS 24-105 which was great on a 35mm film EOS 7 and I have a 24-135 newer Canon lens with image stabilisation.

I also have some older Canon lenses more suited to CCD cameras.

Or is it best I get adapters for my Proline 16803 and Canon lenses or the Pentax 6x7 lenses that are so good yet quite inexpensive.

Or what about the Nikon 14-24 lens or the Canon 24mm F1.4? Or others?

Greg.
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Old 19-07-2010, 11:51 PM
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Octane (Humayun)
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Greg,

I'm not the best photographer in the world, but, if you trawl through the terrestrial imaging section, and do a search on threads started by me, you will see my recent haul of landscapes.

I shoot all my images with the 5D Mark II. The best camera I've owned.

I shoot with the 17-40mm f/4L USM.

The Canon 1Ds Mark IV is not out yet. The 1D Mark IV is, which is the 1.3x crop factor. The 1Ds series are the full frame 35mm sensor (as is the 5D Mark II).

You could possibly pick up a 1Ds Mark III for about $7,000, if not less.

I imagine the 1Ds Mark IV will sell for between $12,000 and $17,000 upon initial release.

H
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Old 19-07-2010, 11:59 PM
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I just realised that you want to do astro widefields.

In that case, stick with the FLI and put on some nice L-series glass.

I'd suggest the 14mm f/2.8L II or the Nikon 14-24mm.

H
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Old 20-07-2010, 04:21 AM
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My recommendation would be a Canon 5DII + a Nikon 14-24 lens with a Nikon>Canon adapter.
Many photographers are using that combo today and is a killer.

Luis
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Old 20-07-2010, 12:52 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Octane View Post
I just realised that you want to do astro widefields.

In that case, stick with the FLI and put on some nice L-series glass.

I'd suggest the 14mm f/2.8L II or the Nikon 14-24mm.

H
I have also posted on the FLI group and the way to go with large chip cameras is Pentax 67 lenses 2nd hand. They are cheap, they have enough backfocus for a filterwheel and a FLI PDF focuser (which I have and is a super electronic focuser but it does take up backfocus) and they also will cover a 16803 chip.

I am not sure what the specs are on L series glass. Are they designed for full frame sensors? It seems a lot of lenses now are designed for APS sized chips and they will not illuminate a 16803 chip nor a 11002 for that matter.


The 14-24mm Nikon is probably what I will get for terrestial and use the Proline with Pentax 67 lenses, filter wheel and pdf focuser for widefield autoguided on a mount. I am thinking a 45mm and a 150 or 200mm and ED glass.

Greg.





Quote:
Originally Posted by Octane View Post
Greg,

I'm not the best photographer in the world, but, if you trawl through the terrestrial imaging section, and do a search on threads started by me, you will see my recent haul of landscapes.

I shoot all my images with the 5D Mark II. The best camera I've owned.

I shoot with the 17-40mm f/4L USM.

The Canon 1Ds Mark IV is not out yet. The 1D Mark IV is, which is the 1.3x crop factor. The 1Ds series are the full frame 35mm sensor (as is the 5D Mark II).

You could possibly pick up a 1Ds Mark III for about $7,000, if not less.

I imagine the 1Ds Mark IV will sell for between $12,000 and $17,000 upon initial release.

H
Gee who do they think they are FLI or something!!

The 1Ds seems a bit specialised and heavy. I think the 5D Mk11 is the go. Not sure how the Nikon D3 or similar stacks up against it. For asro I imagine Canon still has the noise and amp glow edge??

Greg.

Quote:
Originally Posted by luigi View Post
My recommendation would be a Canon 5DII + a Nikon 14-24 lens with a Nikon>Canon adapter.
Many photographers are using that combo today and is a killer.

Luis
Yes it keeps coming up as the way to go.

Greg.
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  #6  
Old 20-07-2010, 01:20 PM
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For example here is a shot from a Canon EF 32mm F2 lens and a Microline 16803 camera:

http://www.pbase.com/image/126657186/large

That is a poor result.

So a lens that has enough backfocus and is sharp to the corners of a 16803 chip probably requires a lens from the film days of medium format.

Greg.
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Old 20-07-2010, 01:44 PM
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Greg,

All Canon EF lenses (except EF-S) are designed to be used on 35mm sensors. Some will vignette more than others. If you're shooting with the 5D Mark II (and above), you can enable Peripheral Illumination Correction, either within the camera, in post using Digital Photo Professional to remove the vignetting. All the lens profiles are built into the software. I prefer to leave it off as I like having the eye drawn towards the centre of my composition. But, for astrophotography, vignetting is a pain in the rear so you would enable PIC.

Your Pentax 6x7 lens route sounds good to me, too.

H
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Old 20-07-2010, 02:11 PM
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Don't get a 1 series unless you make money off your gear. I love mine but they are extremely expensive.

A 5D mk2 would be the trick.

The nikons are very good in low light as well these days.
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Old 20-07-2010, 02:30 PM
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Greg here is all of Canons lenses where you can see the MTF diagram for each lens.

http://www.usa.canon.com/cusa/consum...ef_lens_lineup

There is a guide somewhere on the web how to interpret these diagrams.
The dotted lines show the MTF for wide open and f/8 both tangential and saggital and different lines/mm test patterns. I cant remember exactly.
You will see that a short focal length lens with near perfect off axis performance does not exist.

Below is the MTF for a Canon 300mm F2.8L IS. The non IS version is even better than this.
Next is Canon 24mm F1.4L II USM
The MTF is far worse especially off axis.

MTF will vary with focal length what you should compare is the MTF on axis with the MTF anywhere off axis for the same aperture curves ie tangential and saggital for each lens. MTF is modulation transfer function and is a quantitative measure of resolution.

The LHS scale of the diagram is the MTF. 1.0 is perfect. Along the bottom is the distance in mm off axis.

Bert
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  #10  
Old 20-07-2010, 10:34 PM
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67 Pentax lenses

The Pentax67 lenses can be very cheap and all will cover the big 16k chip, but only a few of them really rate for the demands of a big flat astro chip and LRGB. The 67 300ED and 400ED are the pick - these don't go all that cheap. Most of the others will suffer from variable chromatic aberration. Some of the 67 lenses are actually pretty soft. I have a recent Pentax67 300mm f4 non ED. Sharp and easily covers my PL11002M but has quite bad CA especially in the blue.
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  #11  
Old 21-07-2010, 03:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by avandonk View Post
Greg here is all of Canons lenses where you can see the MTF diagram for each lens.

http://www.usa.canon.com/cusa/consum...ef_lens_lineup

There is a guide somewhere on the web how to interpret these diagrams.
The dotted lines show the MTF for wide open and f/8 both tangential and saggital and different lines/mm test patterns. I cant remember exactly.
You will see that a short focal length lens with near perfect off axis performance does not exist.

Below is the MTF for a Canon 300mm F2.8L IS. The non IS version is even better than this.
Next is Canon 24mm F1.4L II USM
The MTF is far worse especially off axis.


Bert
Thanks Bert.

Which lens do you use? Your images come out great with the 5D.

Most lenses won't handle a 16803 chip with its 52mm diagonal and also the backfocus requirements of a filterwheel and focuser. Hence the interest in both a good terrestial lens that could double for astro work and also a lens that can handle the backfocus and the chip size of the Proline 16803.

Greg.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Doomsayer View Post
The Pentax67 lenses can be very cheap and all will cover the big 16k chip, but only a few of them really rate for the demands of a big flat astro chip and LRGB. The 67 300ED and 400ED are the pick - these don't go all that cheap. Most of the others will suffer from variable chromatic aberration. Some of the 67 lenses are actually pretty soft. I have a recent Pentax67 300mm f4 non ED. Sharp and easily covers my PL11002M but has quite bad CA especially in the blue.
That's interesting. I have a number of lenses I have used with an STL11. 50mm Nikon F1.8 (nice) 85mm Canon FD, 200mm Canon F2.8 (quite nice)
but as you say I got coma in the corners of the FD lenses on an STL and also some coma.

There is a table of 67 Pentax lenses and a review of their performance.

It seems the best are:

55mm F4 and 300 or 400mm ED F4. I haven't been able to find a 300mm F4 ED for sale. They seem quite rare. Also I am not sure I need one as my FSQ106ED and reducer is 330mm and has no issues at all. The 55mm and perhaps a 200mm may be the go. The 200mm rated fairly well but chromatic aberration may hinder. I believe though there is software that corrects the chromatic aberration of lenses. I don't know who well it works.

The Nikon 14-24mm F2.8 and the Canon 24mm F1.4 from what I have studied so far on the net seem to be the best lenses currently available apart from super expensive Leica lenses (US$6-8,000).

I am leaning towards a Canon 5D Mk11, adapter and Nikon 14-24mm F2.8 and Pentax 67 55mm F4 ([perhaps the 45mm F4 as well which is a lot cheaper) and perhaps a 200mm F4 with a Precise Parts adapter, the Proline 16803, filterwheel and FLI PDF focuser and make a rig to support it all and autoguide it with a guide scope and autoguiding camera.

Greg.
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  #12  
Old 21-07-2010, 06:58 PM
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FYI, Canon are meant to be releasing a 14-24mm f/2.8 L this year. I'm hanging to see reviews of this.

Cheers,
Jason.
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Old 22-07-2010, 09:56 AM
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Greg I use the Canon 300mm F2.8L non IS version as I consider it far superior for astro use. The IS version is better for terrestial use as it can counteract movement during the exposure. This allows you to go about two stops slower in shutter speed for better results. Remember the old rule that you should use a shutter speed which is shorter than the reciprocal of the focal length if hand held. So for 50mm FL a 1/50th sec and 300mm FL 1/300th of a sec is the longest exposure.

The problem with the IS lens assembly is that it may not 'park' in exactly the orientation of the lens axis. This gives you asymmetric stars.

Another thing that makes lenses work better at astro imaging is to use an exterior aperture and extended lens shade to completely cut out all light not contributing to the image from entering the lens. This enhances contrast and gives lovely round stars rather than blobs with spikes.

My Canon 300mm F2.8L lens does vignette a full frame to some extent. The real usable circle is about 30mm. This lens has has a single crystal of Fluorite and two ED elements in the main element group. I doubt if any so called large format lenses are even usable for astro use on axis. They are all soft and suffer from CA even on axis. They are even worse off axis. These lenses produced 'good' images only because less enlargement was needed for the final print (in black and white so CA was not even a problem) not because of any inherent quality.

This is why I use a Canon 5DH for widefields as it gets really complicated with cooled astro CCD cameras and electronic lenses such as the Canon 300mm F2.8 which are far easier to focus etc when they actually connected to a camera as the focus ring is useless when not energised by the camera.

Bert

Last edited by avandonk; 22-07-2010 at 10:55 AM.
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Old 22-07-2010, 08:35 PM
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Thanks Bert,

The Pentax 6 x 7 300mm and 400mm ED IF are very good astro lenses.

I saw a Rho Ophiuchi taken with the 300mm ED and a FLI Proline 39 megapixel camera and it was very very nice.

I am told the non ED version is still good for narrowband but has some chromatic aberration.

The 300mm ED seems almost impossible to find. I have been looking around and couldn't find any for sale. There is a 400mm ED but its US$3650 which seems a lot for a lens (may as well buy a Tak refractor).

My FSQ106ED with reducer is 330mm and gives pinpoint stars to the corner of the 16803 chip so more looking for about 200mm or less in focal length for astro work.

Greg.
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Old 22-07-2010, 08:39 PM
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200mm or less, maybe the canon 135/2

fairly cheap (relatively). Getting near the best you can get for land based photography - again, not sure about pointing up yet.
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Old 22-07-2010, 10:23 PM
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you've heard my rants already but have you also checked the reviews at dpreview.com

they have quite objective reviews and some very good noise comparison tests. a little bit hard to tell true SNR performance on faint targets but some very useful tests between comparable SLRs.

Phil
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Old 22-07-2010, 10:28 PM
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and you should make your own judgement on the modded camera with CCNite filters. i did a similar test when i was considering buying a modded 5DmkII and using the filters for daytime use, but I decided while the filters certainly return the camera closer to normal, colour balance is not good enough for perfectionist (but good enough for most people!).

so i have an unmodded 5DII which does all my daytime work, but would like one of each. hard to justify the cost of a modded 5DII compared to a real astro CCD camera but I am still thinking about it for the ease of use for widefield. i would certainly not buy a modded 5DII if deep sky work through a scope is the primary end use.
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Old 23-07-2010, 08:16 AM
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Hi Phil,

I think the Canons still have the edge for astro work. As far as daytime shots go I suppose it is closer but from what I already read the Canon there has the edge for terrestial. If you do sports photography then the Nikon.

Also I have been accumulating some lenses now for Canons.

I plan to do some widefield lens imaging with the Proline 16803 camera, filterwheel, FLI digital focuser and Pentax 67 F4 lenses. I have 45mm F4, 165mm F2.8, 300mm F4 on the way with a special adapter to fit it to the FLI camera being made shortly. The 300mm may only be used for terrestial as I hear it has chromatic aberration for astro. Although it can be used for narrowband (another advantage of narrowband apart from imaging through light pollution is it is not affected by the chromatic aberration of your optical system).

I tried using Canon FD lenses and an STL11 a while back and whilst a few of them turned out OK nothing spectacular. This one was the best:

http://www.pbase.com/gregbradley/image/90484673

But no way would that be good enough to beat Phil Hart at the Malins!! And of course that is the standard I want to be met, hehehehe.


Greg.
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Old 23-07-2010, 09:11 AM
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ah yes the Canon is better than Nikon tripe!

Sorry Greg, but the defining line between Canon Backs and Nikon back is well non extent anymore. Everything depends on the user and the skills of that user with the camera. I am using my Nikon D3 for some wide field astro and found it works very well unmodded. A modded version would be as equal to a Canon modded and only the deep magentas would be of more use. I own a 40d with cooling and modded and it does a lovely job but has more noise related issues than my D3. Several generations apart of course, but an unmodded can produce very good results now with the newer filters. Either Canon or Nikon would be a good choice, being modded will help but is not totally essential.

I think the major issue for you is the image circle on DSLR lenses. You could use it on the large format FLI but it is going to vignette quite a lot with DSLR lenses.

Your selection of the 14-24 is good but I don't think I will ever use that lens at 14mm to do wide field. I found at 24mm the field was just the right size, but other issues of being at f2.8 made for seagulls forming in the outer areas of the image.

You don't need an IS or VR lens for astro work. It needs to be turned off anyway if you do have it as it makes stars look like squares. So you could go for a second hand either Canon or Nikon Lens around 200mm and then something like a 24mm prime for ulta wide images.

Bottom line is that both Nikon and Canon make fine lenses and their backs are great too. I shoot with a number of guys that have pro bodies from both manufacturers and in the end the best images come from being proficient with the gear, not the gear being better.
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Old 23-07-2010, 09:14 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley View Post
Thanks Bert,

The Pentax 6 x 7 300mm and 400mm ED IF are very good astro lenses.

I saw a Rho Ophiuchi taken with the 300mm ED and a FLI Proline 39 megapixel camera and it was very very nice.

I am told the non ED version is still good for narrowband but has some chromatic aberration.

The 300mm ED seems almost impossible to find. I have been looking around and couldn't find any for sale. There is a 400mm ED but its US$3650 which seems a lot for a lens (may as well buy a Tak refractor).

My FSQ106ED with reducer is 330mm and gives pinpoint stars to the corner of the 16803 chip so more looking for about 200mm or less in focal length for astro work.

Greg.
If you want the best lens ever built with a focal length of 200mm then the non IS Canon 200mm F1.8L is the lens to go for. It is no longer made and fetches a premium price in good nick. There is a setup with four or six? of these with astro detectors on a fork mount to do simultaneous overlapping fields to give really wide field surveys by professional astronomers. I will see if I can dig up the site.

Bert
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