Hey Folks,
It's been a while since I've done one of these as I broke the mount for my good scope (meaning a little 5" Orion Mak) but since I couldn't sleep this evening, I decided to mess around with my little scope a bit.
Now my "little scope" is really a bit of a home brew concoction. For you folks that speak "astro-techno-babble", it's a Bushnell refractor tube (yes, one of those gawd aweful silver dept store Bushnells) but it's got a Simmons front objective and a Meade 1 1/4" focus. The whole thing is mounted on a small, but rather efficient Simmon's EQ mount. Here I used an Owl Optics 40mm eye piece. I have maybe $20 into this whole rig (not including the eye pieces of course) and for what it is, it's actually not a bad little scope.
I would also quickly add that while normally I "stack" my astro shots, these two were not stacked...these were both just single images shot thru the scope.
Sooo...what we have here is a Canon 40D with a Tamron 70-200mm f/2.8 lens (zoomed all the way out to 70mm), hand held looking thru my little scope with a 40mm eye piece. Since I was just messing around, I didn't even have the camera set to RAW or anything...this was just the small, low quality jpg setting on the camera. Both images were sharpened in PS CS3.
This first one I shot on manual, ISO 1250, f/2.8 at 1/60 of a sec. Only minor levels and contrast adjustment on this shot.
The second one here was also shot on manual, also at f/2.8, 1/60 sec but this time at ISO 800 (and then I corrected the exposure in PS with levels and a contrast/brightness layer).
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I do apologize for the mis-orientation between the two images.....as I was shooting hand held, I was moving around quite a bit trying to get a good angle on the eye piece.
I know I've gotten sharper images thru my Orion, but for just "screwing around on a sleepless night", I can't really complain either. I'll have to go back on another night when I have time to play with things a little and re-shoot in RAW and then do a stack and see how that comes out.
As always, comments and opinions are quite welcomed and encouraged.
Peace,
Jim






