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After pondering the vaious Astro-photo options, I've decided the easiest way
to get what I'm after is buy a reasonable DSLR camera. I want good results but am not looking for Hubble Quality. In fact, I really don't even want color images---I want BW images but with some detail. I will do a lot of lunar work, some solar too. I would like to capture DSOs as they appear in the eyepiece with a decent telescope---and perhaps a better but color is not important. Oh sure, I might occasionally play with color but really color is not important. The reason for DSLR is that I do not want to drag a laptop outside and all that is attendant with that mess. I now have a GM-8---the tracking is excellent. Can you point me to website with some BW examples? So---is there a DSLR that would achieve this without costing over $1,000 and not needing to be modified? Minolta would be great as I have a TON of Minolta stuff---all film. Thanks for the help, Doink |
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On Sun, 26 Mar 2006 14:22:14 -0800, "Doink"
wrote: So---is there a DSLR that would achieve this without costing over $1,000 and not needing to be modified? Minolta would be great as I have a TON of Minolta stuff---all film. There is the Konica-Minolta Maxxum 5D. Unfortunately Konica-Minolta is getting out of the camera business. |
#3
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Unmodified, 2 year old Canon 300D's can now be had for $400 or so.
I know, I just sold one. Hutech modified, 2 year old Canon 300D's can now be had for $600 or so. I know, I just bought one. Keep an eye on Astromart. :-) For black and white, you can simply greyscale the image. -Stephen "Doink" wrote in message ... After pondering the vaious Astro-photo options, I've decided the easiest way to get what I'm after is buy a reasonable DSLR camera. I want good results but am not looking for Hubble Quality. In fact, I really don't even want color images---I want BW images but with some detail. I will do a lot of lunar work, some solar too. I would like to capture DSOs as they appear in the eyepiece with a decent telescope---and perhaps a better but color is not important. Oh sure, I might occasionally play with color but really color is not important. The reason for DSLR is that I do not want to drag a laptop outside and all that is attendant with that mess. I now have a GM-8---the tracking is excellent. Can you point me to website with some BW examples? So---is there a DSLR that would achieve this without costing over $1,000 and not needing to be modified? Minolta would be great as I have a TON of Minolta stuff---all film. Thanks for the help, Doink |
#4
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SP---
What does the modification get you? Do you have a website with images taken with your unmodified camera? Doink "Stephen Paul" wrote in message ... Unmodified, 2 year old Canon 300D's can now be had for $400 or so. I know, I just sold one. Hutech modified, 2 year old Canon 300D's can now be had for $600 or so. I know, I just bought one. Keep an eye on Astromart. :-) For black and white, you can simply greyscale the image. -Stephen "Doink" wrote in message ... After pondering the vaious Astro-photo options, I've decided the easiest way to get what I'm after is buy a reasonable DSLR camera. I want good results but am not looking for Hubble Quality. In fact, I really don't even want color images---I want BW images but with some detail. I will do a lot of lunar work, some solar too. I would like to capture DSOs as they appear in the eyepiece with a decent telescope---and perhaps a better but color is not important. Oh sure, I might occasionally play with color but really color is not important. The reason for DSLR is that I do not want to drag a laptop outside and all that is attendant with that mess. I now have a GM-8---the tracking is excellent. Can you point me to website with some BW examples? So---is there a DSLR that would achieve this without costing over $1,000 and not needing to be modified? Minolta would be great as I have a TON of Minolta stuff---all film. Thanks for the help, Doink |
#5
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![]() Doink wrote: After pondering the vaious Astro-photo options, I've decided the easiest way to get what I'm after is buy a reasonable DSLR camera. I want good results but am not looking for Hubble Quality. In fact, I really don't even want color images Hi: Do you not want color images as in..."can live without them," or as in "don't like them"? If the latter...look at an SBIG ST402 or one of the other integrating, cooled color cameras on the market. IMHO, the main reason for going the DSLR route is to get color in a reasonably easy fashion--no filters and filter wheels. Oh, and for the Moon, just get a Toucam...it will do a better job than just about anything else. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ and _The Urban Astronomer's Guide_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Join the SCT User Mailing List. http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/sct-user See my home page at http://skywatch.brainiac.com/astroland/index.htm for further info For Uncle Rod's Astro Blog See: http://journals.aol.com/rmollise/UncleRodsAstroBlog/ |
#6
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![]() RMOLLISE wrote: or one of the other integrating, cooled color cameras on the market. I meant "monochrome," of course. Anyway, to expand on my other post, I think you'll find obtaining good quality monochrome images considerably easier with a "real" CCD cam than a DSLR. If you need color, then things shift the other way. Also, the SBIG (or a Starlight Xpress, or one of the other entry level astro cams) will be considerably more sensitive than the DSLR. If price is a problem, look at the Meade DSI Pro or DSI Pro II. These are monochrome cameras that do not cost a whole lot, but can do a very good job. Maybe just the thing. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ and _The Urban Astronomer's Guide_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Join the SCT User Mailing List. http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/sct-user See my home page at http://skywatch.brainiac.com/astroland/index.htm for further info For Uncle Rod's Astro Blog See: http://journals.aol.com/rmollise/UncleRodsAstroBlog/ |
#7
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Hi Rod---
I want to get away from hauling a computer out. I have a Meade LPI and I'm very pleased with what it can do but it's a pain hauling the laptop out. The DSLR is self contained. That's really what I want. Color doesn't matter and I have thought about the Meade DSI Pro but I really want to get away from hauling out the laptop.... Doink "RMOLLISE" wrote in message oups.com... RMOLLISE wrote: or one of the other integrating, cooled color cameras on the market. I meant "monochrome," of course. Anyway, to expand on my other post, I think you'll find obtaining good quality monochrome images considerably easier with a "real" CCD cam than a DSLR. If you need color, then things shift the other way. Also, the SBIG (or a Starlight Xpress, or one of the other entry level astro cams) will be considerably more sensitive than the DSLR. If price is a problem, look at the Meade DSI Pro or DSI Pro II. These are monochrome cameras that do not cost a whole lot, but can do a very good job. Maybe just the thing. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ and _The Urban Astronomer's Guide_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Join the SCT User Mailing List. http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/sct-user See my home page at http://skywatch.brainiac.com/astroland/index.htm for further info For Uncle Rod's Astro Blog See: http://journals.aol.com/rmollise/UncleRodsAstroBlog/ |
#8
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RMOLLISE wrote:
Doink wrote: After pondering the vaious Astro-photo options, I've decided the easiest way to get what I'm after is buy a reasonable DSLR camera. I want good results but am not looking for Hubble Quality. In fact, I really don't even want color images Hi: Do you not want color images as in..."can live without them," or as in "don't like them"? If the latter...look at an SBIG ST402 or one of the other integrating, cooled color cameras on the market. I think he said up front that he didn't want to have a computer in the loop .. though I may be confusing this with another thread ![]() Phil |
#9
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On Sun, 26 Mar 2006 14:22:14 -0800, "Doink" wrote:
So---is there a DSLR that would achieve this without costing over $1,000 and not needing to be modified? Minolta would be great as I have a TON of Minolta stuff---all film. The Canon DSLRs seem to do the best in terms of S/N. You can get a new 300D for around $500 these days. No DLSR does a very good job with color, but since you want to do B&W that shouldn't be a problem. You can get the camera modified to increase its QE in the red, although if you convert to B&W that is less of an issue. The modification does make the camera a little less friendly for ordinary use, assuming you had that in mind. I've used my 300D for some limited astroimaging, and I generally convert to B&W. While it doesn't compare with a proper cooled camera, it still does a pretty good job. I don't think you'd be disappointed. And for that matter, it is a super camera for ordinary imaging, too, if you don't mind swapping your Minolta glass for Canon. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
#10
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Chris L Peterson:
...No DLSR does a very good job with color... ?? http://tinyurl.com/nvgff M57 http://tinyurl.com/ooxwk Orion http://tinyurl.com/pu7sa M45 http://tinyurl.com/q85uv M31 http://tinyurl.com/75ptk NGC 6992/95 I thought these -- among thousands of other color DSLR astrophotos available on the WWW -- looked OK. Low standards on my part, no doubt. Davoud -- usenet *at* davidillig dawt com |
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