Hello, I'm an amatuer astronomy enthusiast. My dream was to get a nice telescope some day, and one day about 3 yrs ago I did. I purchased an 8" computerized telescope which is a big enough (gathers enough light) for some nice seeing. It's also small enough to be portable, which at my location is necessary. Like a lot of people, one day I held my digital camera up to the eyepiece and got a half way decent picture of the moon. It went from there, and you can see some of my efforts here:
http://www.geocities.com/keithnk_m42![]()
I mostly use a Canon G2, but sometimes a Coolpix 4500. It was an old Kodak D260 that I first held up to the eyepiece. For those who know what it means, I use a Meade LX200 in the Alt/Az mode, which mostly means I can't take photos of more than 15 seconds duration - the G2's max "bulb" anyway.
These are a little different than the high quality high definition photos we normally strive for. Not that this isn't the goal here too, but because the objects I'm after are faint and small, I normally have to turn up the ISO to max (400), open the appeture as far as possible, and usually expose for the max (15 sec) Then to extract all that I can, I crank up the brightness and contrast as much as I dare to get everything possible there. All this means they are grainy and over processed by normal standards. - but that's what it takes to get what I have. It's been fun, and the time spent under the stars have alone been worth it.
Enjoy,
Keith
. The new ones now also come standard with electric focusers and mirror locks. Both very very helpful for getting stable repeatable focus.

