Thanks all for your comments.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lester
Very nice Mike, the contrast you still got so close to sun rise is remarkable.
I imaged Jupiter this morning just before sun rise in steady conditions, but couldn't get any where near the contrast to bring out the detail that you have achieved.
Well done.
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Thanks Lester - the background was definitely quite bright. In the last frame, I had to raise the threshhold parameter in Ninox to 60 so that it recognised Jupiter from the background noise.
But adjusting the levels in Photoshop fixed it up. Can you post your image? I'd love to see it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Miaplacidus
Cutting it fine, aren't you Mike? 10 minutes before sunrise.
Nice animation. (Again. Of course.)
What is the longest animation you've achieved? When do we get to see an all-nighter?
Thanks for sharing.
Brian.
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Thanks Brian, the last image was at 6:55 and sunrise was at 6:59 that day. I could barely see Jupiter naked eye at that time.
I think 2.5 hours has been my longest animation, I'd have to look back through my old images. I can never really do long long ones because I can't see Jupiter once it's gone past overhead thanks to trees in my backyard.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul Haese
Nice image, but again despite your 30 second run I seem some odd blurring in your images. Yes seeing makes a huge impact here but it looks like either coatings or collimation. I figure you are using cats eye collimation kit, so that is unlikely. What are your thoughts. Are the coatings degrading on the mirror? Do you see any slight bubbles on the surface?
Could you show us a raw frame?
Animation is very smooth and the last frame does show more detail.
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I've definitely been noticing something and have been blaming it on mirror coating or seeing, but Damian Peach suggested today it could be high frequency vibrations from the EQ6 when imbalanced. He said that Bruce Kingsley experienced this with his C11 on an old EQ6 and got the high speed blurring when it was imbalanced.
It could definitely be the cause, as I was imbalanced that morning after taking the cooling system off (I needed to take it off so the newt could fit back in the dob base to image the ISS). I also don't usually pay much attention to the balance when I'm not properly drift aligned as I'm always using the hand paddle to re-centre the planet anyway.
I hope it's just balance - my main concern is that it's the EQ6 showing signs of wear and tear after having a 12" newt and 25+kg of counterweights on it for several years. Then it would need a major overhaul, and sending it away is definitely not something I want to do at this stage of the Jupiter season.
Thanks for prompting me to investigate more.