I have also been blessed enough to do a lot of upgrades this year. I was able to upgrade from my Gary Honis modified DSLR to the SBIG STF-8300 monochrome CCD camera. To go with the new CCD camera I was also able to get the Starlight Xpress 7 position 36mm USB filter wheel and load it with Astrodon Gen 2 LRGB and 5nm Hydrogen alpha, OIII, and SII filters. Along the way I also put the Orion 50mm mini guidescope and StarShoot autoguider on the shelf and replaced them with the Starlight Xpress off-axis guider and QHY5L-II guide camera. These have all made a huge improvement in my images.
In September I was able to upgrade my mount. Some would not call going from a mount rated to carry 50 lbs (CGEM DX), to a mount with a capacity of 44 lbs (Atlas Pro) an upgrade. For me this has made a huge difference. I am now able to take single subs for as long as I want (in theory). The longest subs I have taken to date are the 45 minute OIII subs in my recent IC 410 image. I took 10 subs and they were all keepers. I'm sure I could do 60 minute (or even longer) subs and still have nice tight and rounds stars. EQMOD and Cartes du Ciel has also been a great addition compared to NexRemote.
The carbon fiber Levenhuk 8" RC will remain to be my long focal length scope for 2015. I am really enjoying the new Teleskop Service carbon fiber 107mm f/6.5 triplet and see it becoming my primary scope. The SV60EDS was sent back to Stellarvue and I should be receiving my new widefield scope on Monday, the William Optics 5-element Star71. I have recently installed the Rigel Systems nStep motor to the focuser on the 107mm scope and am looking forward to automating the focus on this scope. I think this will be another huge upgrade that I will likely want to have on my other two imaging scopes. I am thinking this will be the subject for my January post here at Little Piney Observatory.
I always find it interesting to look back at some of my older images and seeing how I have improved. It so happens I am working on IC 410 this December and I also imaged it last December with my old equipment. Here is a comparison of the shots. Dec 2013 was done with the DSLR camera and was 47 subs of 300 seconds for a total of 3.9 hrs. The Dec 2014 is (so far) a total of 20.5 hours with 18 X 1800 second H-alpha subs, 10 X 2700 second OIII, and 14 X 300 seconds each for RGB. I'm hoping to add some SII soon to finish it up and complete my first Hubble Palette image.
Click on image for better resolution |
Its also amazing to me how many good people I have come to know in this hobby. I have several new web friends that I hope to meet in person some day. From my good friends Martin Hrdlicka up near Chicago, to Dennis St Germain down in Florida, all the good friends from the old Hayneedle Starparty forum, to all the great people on Cloudynights. It really is a great hobby with great people that help each other learn and get better. I hope you all had a great 2014 and wish nothing but the best for 2015. Have a great new year everyone! :)
glad you are happy with all your new equipment. I am learning a lot from you . Thanks AGAIN !!
ReplyDeleteHappy 2015 !!!!
Thanks Dennis...Happy New Year! :)
DeleteYou are doing great job Rich, keep up!! Happy new year 2015
ReplyDeleteThank you Martin....Happy New Year! :)
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ReplyDeleteIt looks like your exactly the person I was trying to find. I'm getting ready to upgrade from a Celestron AVX mount and was really hoping to find something in the $2000 range that could come close to the performance your taking about with the Atlas. I'm about where you were in being ready to move to the next level of imaging. Thanks so much for this post.
ReplyDeleteAl
Glad you liked it Al. I'm still enjoying the Atlas Pro mount. In my opinion its the best in the under $2K range of mounts. If you go with it be sure to try out EQMOD and Cartes du Ciel.
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