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I've have a Meade ETX 90 as well as a Nikon D70 with the adapter to
connect the both. I've taken a few moon-shots and my results made me look this group up and search for advice. I have lots of questions, many of which I'm sure I'll forget by the time I'm done with this message. All of my moon-shots are blurry; my first thought (which might ultimately be correct) was that the shutter of the camera is causing everything to move (ever so slightly) and, thus, making it look blurry. I'm using the standard Meade tripod, which is substantial IMO, so is it possible that the shutter is causing it? I think I've only set it for 1 second shutter. I get good light, just blurry output. How would one refer to the Meade ETX 90? I'm guessing that when I see SCT, it refers to schmidt cassegrain, whereas the ETX is a maksutov cassegrain. I can look up what the differences are, but is there a When viewing the moon it's pretty detailed, but the moon is obviously relatively close. When I was looking at Mars a couple days ago, it was awfully small; too small for pictures. I have a couple different eyepieces, 26mm, 18mm and 5mm plus a 2x. The 5mm made it appear larger, of course, but I couldn't get it to focus very well. Are there better eyepieces, or am I already at the limit of this particular scope? Does anyone else here use a similar setup? Any good hints/tips that might help me contribute here in the future? As mentioned in the subject, an FAQ might help as well, if there is one. Any info is greatly appreciated. Bob |
#2
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Bob wrote:
I've have a Meade ETX 90 as well as a Nikon D70 with the adapter to connect the both. I've taken a few moon-shots and my results made me look this group up and search for advice. I don't see why they should be blurry at all provided that you have got the focus right. Focussing is somewhat difficult at high focal ratios - so this is easier said than done. What you might find helps is to take a set of shots at bracketted exposures moving through the point of optimum focus. Some DSLRs will do the exposure bracketting for you. No film is wasted. My MTO 1000mm f10 lens works better for me with my Pentax IstD than with classical film - largely because I can get almost instant feedback on any focus error. The film has to be developed to see the results. I have lots of questions, many of which I'm sure I'll forget by the time I'm done with this message. All of my moon-shots are blurry; my first thought (which might ultimately be correct) was that the shutter of the camera is causing everything to move (ever so slightly) and, thus, making it look blurry. I'm using the standard Meade tripod, which is substantial IMO, so is it possible that the shutter is causing it? I think I've only set it for 1 second shutter. I get good light, just blurry output. A 1s exposure on the moon sounds far too long. Try something more like 1/30s and if necessary increase the ASA setting on the camera. What does the automatic exposure metering think the exposure should be? Michael Oates has a nice astro exposure calculator on the web somewhere that will give you a better guide to get started. I forget the URL. How would one refer to the Meade ETX 90? I'm guessing that when I see SCT, it refers to schmidt cassegrain, whereas the ETX is a maksutov cassegrain. I can look up what the differences are, but is there a Not by enough difference to affect the basic advice. When viewing the moon it's pretty detailed, but the moon is obviously relatively close. When I was looking at Mars a couple days ago, it was awfully small; too small for pictures. I have a couple different eyepieces, 26mm, 18mm and 5mm plus a 2x. The 5mm made it appear larger, of course, but I couldn't get it to focus very well. Are there better eyepieces, or am I already at the limit of this particular scope? You won't see all that much on Mars with a 90mm aperture, but you should be able to see the major features at opposition if the scope has had a couple of hours of cool down time so that the image is stable at high magnification. Does anyone else here use a similar setup? Any good hints/tips that might help me contribute here in the future? As mentioned in the subject, an FAQ might help as well, if there is one. Any info is greatly appreciated. I don't think there is a FAQ for this. But maybe there should be? One other thing to watch is don't leave your camera exposed to ingress of dust whilst messing about with scopes. Dust getting onto the CCD can be rather annoying. Regards, Martin Brown |
#3
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Bob wrote:
I've have a Meade ETX 90 as well as a Nikon D70 with the adapter to connect the both. I've taken a few moon-shots and my results made me look this group up and search for advice. I have lots of questions, many of which I'm sure I'll forget by the time I'm done with this message. All of my moon-shots are blurry; my first thought (which might ultimately be correct) was that the shutter of the camera is causing everything to move (ever so slightly) and, thus, making it look blurry. I'm using the standard Meade tripod, which is substantial IMO, so is it possible that the shutter is causing it? I think I've only set it for 1 second shutter. I get good light, just blurry output. How would one refer to the Meade ETX 90? I'm guessing that when I see SCT, it refers to schmidt cassegrain, whereas the ETX is a maksutov cassegrain. I can look up what the differences are, but is there a When viewing the moon it's pretty detailed, but the moon is obviously relatively close. When I was looking at Mars a couple days ago, it was awfully small; too small for pictures. I have a couple different eyepieces, 26mm, 18mm and 5mm plus a 2x. The 5mm made it appear larger, of course, but I couldn't get it to focus very well. Are there better eyepieces, or am I already at the limit of this particular scope? Does anyone else here use a similar setup? Any good hints/tips that might help me contribute here in the future? As mentioned in the subject, an FAQ might help as well, if there is one. Any info is greatly appreciated. Bob One place you might go for suggestions is the d70astro Yahoo group. I wonder about hanging a camera as large and heavy as the D70 on the back of an ETX 90. It might be a bit much for time exposures, but it should work OK for the Moon. 1 second exposures sound long for the Moon. On an F7 scope I often take shots in the range of 1/1000 of a second. Are you using an infrared remote to trigger the camera? If not, you might want to try it. You might also try using the self timer on the camera to reduce vibrations. Your higher power problems are probably "seeing conditions". If you wait until Mars is higher in the sky, you may have better results because you'll be looking through less atmosphere. You might go to the Clear Sky Clock to get predictions of upcoming conditions in your area. http://cleardarksky.com/ Good luck. Mark |
#4
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Martin Brown wrote:
Bob wrote: snip A 1s exposure on the moon sounds far too long. Try something more like 1/30s and if necessary increase the ASA setting on the camera. What does the automatic exposure metering think the exposure should be? The D70 meter won't work unless you have an AF lens on it. |
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"Mark S. Holden" wrote in message
... Bob wrote: I've have a Meade ETX 90 as well as a Nikon D70 with the adapter to connect the both. I've taken a few moon-shots and my results made me look this group up and search for advice. I have lots of questions, many of which I'm sure I'll forget by the time I'm done with this message. All of my moon-shots are blurry; my first thought (which might ultimately be correct) was that the shutter of the camera is causing everything to move (ever so slightly) and, thus, making it look blurry. I'm using the standard Meade tripod, which is substantial IMO, so is it possible that the shutter is causing it? I think I've only set it for 1 second shutter. I get good light, just blurry output. How would one refer to the Meade ETX 90? I'm guessing that when I see SCT, it refers to schmidt cassegrain, whereas the ETX is a maksutov cassegrain. I can look up what the differences are, but is there a When viewing the moon it's pretty detailed, but the moon is obviously relatively close. When I was looking at Mars a couple days ago, it was awfully small; too small for pictures. I have a couple different eyepieces, 26mm, 18mm and 5mm plus a 2x. The 5mm made it appear larger, of course, but I couldn't get it to focus very well. Are there better eyepieces, or am I already at the limit of this particular scope? Does anyone else here use a similar setup? Any good hints/tips that might help me contribute here in the future? As mentioned in the subject, an FAQ might help as well, if there is one. Any info is greatly appreciated. Bob One place you might go for suggestions is the d70astro Yahoo group. I wonder about hanging a camera as large and heavy as the D70 on the back of an ETX 90. It might be a bit much for time exposures, but it should work OK for the Moon. 1 second exposures sound long for the Moon. On an F7 scope I often take shots in the range of 1/1000 of a second. Are you using an infrared remote to trigger the camera? If not, you might want to try it. You might also try using the self timer on the camera to reduce vibrations. Or you could use the old fashioned "hat technique". Hold a hat over the objective so light can't enter. Open the shutter and wait half a second for the vibrations to die out. Remove the hat (without hitting the telescope tube). Put the hat back. Close the shutter. Moving the hat out of the way and then right back will give between a third and a half second exposure. Your higher power problems are probably "seeing conditions". If you wait until Mars is higher in the sky, you may have better results because you'll be looking through less atmosphere. You might go to the Clear Sky Clock to get predictions of upcoming conditions in your area. http://cleardarksky.com/ Good luck. Mark |
#6
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Bob wrote:
I've have a Meade ETX 90 as well as a Nikon D70 with the adapter to connect the both. . . . All of my moon-shots are blurry; . . . I think I've only set it for 1 second shutter. I get good light, just blurry output. For an FAQ see Lodriguss's "Catching the Light" web guide: http://www.astropix.com/HTML/I_ASTROP/I08/I08.HTM in http://www.astropix.com/INDEX.HTM The Moon's orbital speed is such that you cannot expose for 1 second without the image blurring. It's movement is apparent when both visually observing and when recording photographically. Just watch the edge of the Moon occult any background star through a telescope counting "one-Mississippi, two-Mississippi". The Moon also is usually too bright for a 1 second exposure. Get Covington's _Astrophotography for Amateurs_ book. It has a series of rough exposure tables in the back for various celestial objects. http://www.covingtoninnovations.com/books.html Or to get started now, use this web implementation of Covington's exposure calculator at: http://www.rphotoz.com/astrophoto/expcalcs.html Note a quarter phase Moon at 100ASA in an f/6 scope needs to be exposed for only 1/125th of a second. At 1/125th of a second, the Moon's motion is brief, such that you can make an exposure without equatorial tracking. With a shorter exposure time, you should be able to get a shot with better resolution. Use the suggested settings in the exposure calculator as a starting point and take a series of photos around those settings to iterate to the best shot. For short-term focusing on bright objects like the Moon, make a Hartmann mask. http://www.astropix.com/HTML/I_ASTRO...0817/I0817.HTM http://www.gushie.demon.co.uk/focussing_the_camera.htm If you get hooked, think about purchasing a flip-mirror for parfocal focusing. http://www.gushie.demon.co.uk/ccd_im...ilter%20holder - Canopus56 |
#7
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On Wed, 02 Nov 2005 13:01:51 -0500, Tom Royer wrote:
[snip] Or you could use the old fashioned "hat technique". Hold a hat over the objective so light can't enter. Open the shutter and wait half a second for the vibrations to die out. Remove the hat (without hitting the telescope tube). Put the hat back. Close the shutter. Moving the hat out of the way and then right back will give between a third and a half second exposure. That's brilliant ! |
#8
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Bob wrote in news
![]() I've have a Meade ETX 90 as well as a Nikon D70 with the adapter to connect the both. I've taken a few moon-shots and my results made me look this group up and search for advice. I have lots of questions, many of which I'm sure I'll forget by the time I'm done with this message. All of my moon-shots are blurry; my first thought (which might ultimately be correct) was that the shutter of the camera is causing everything to move (ever so slightly) and, thus, making it look blurry. I'm using the standard Meade tripod, which is substantial IMO, so is it possible that the shutter is causing it? I think I've only set it for 1 second shutter. I get good light, just blurry output. Others have given you good answers but I want to stress something about your shutter speed here. The full moon filling the field of your camera is equivalent to a fully sunlit scene on Earth. What do you think you would get taking one second exposures of a daylight scene on earth? Canopus56 gave you some good advice on how to set the exposure time depending on the lunar phase. How would one refer to the Meade ETX 90? I'm guessing that when I see SCT, it refers to schmidt cassegrain, whereas the ETX is a maksutov cassegrain. I can look up what the differences are, but is there a You broke off here. Mak-Cas scopes have a very good optical design and I believe the little Meade scope is a reasonably good example of the type. The larger Mak-Cas's have a reputation of being slow to get to thermal equilibium so need some sort of active cooling system (a fan) to bring them quickly to ambient temperature, this is important to eliminate thermal distortions in the image. I really doubt that this is going to be a problem with a 90mm scope - it doesn't have a huge mass of glass in it that needs to cool down. When viewing the moon it's pretty detailed, but the moon is obviously relatively close. When I was looking at Mars a couple days ago, it was awfully small; too small for pictures. I have a couple different eyepieces, 26mm, 18mm and 5mm plus a 2x. The 5mm made it appear larger, of course, but I couldn't get it to focus very well. Are there better eyepieces, or am I already at the limit of this particular scope? That's pretty normal. Wait till around midnight so that Mars is as high above the horizon as possible. That will give you the best seeing. Also the atmosphere does occaisionally settle down to give better views. Klazmon. Does anyone else here use a similar setup? Any good hints/tips that might help me contribute here in the future? As mentioned in the subject, an FAQ might help as well, if there is one. Any info is greatly appreciated. Bob |
#9
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Tom Rauschenbach wrote in
news ![]() On Wed, 02 Nov 2005 13:01:51 -0500, Tom Royer wrote: [snip] Or you could use the old fashioned "hat technique". Hold a hat over the objective so light can't enter. Open the shutter and wait half a second for the vibrations to die out. Remove the hat (without hitting the telescope tube). Put the hat back. Close the shutter. Moving the hat out of the way and then right back will give between a third and a half second exposure. That's brilliant ! Probably still too long an exposure time for the moon but ok for other objects. Klazmon. |
#10
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Mark S. Holden wrote:
Martin Brown wrote: Bob wrote: snip A 1s exposure on the moon sounds far too long. Try something more like 1/30s and if necessary increase the ASA setting on the camera. What does the automatic exposure metering think the exposure should be? The D70 meter won't work unless you have an AF lens on it. Really? I didn't know that. It seems an odd restriction to impose. My istD will operate autofocus with AF lenses, manual focus with MF lenses and even works with old PK and M42 manual aperture lenses at a pinch. In all cases the metering will work normally. Regards, Martin Brown |
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