Welcome traveller

This blog is very much written for my benefit. I've previously tried writing a blog, but I got bored as I had nothing particularly interesting to say. In this blog I will be mostly documenting my progress when it comes to astrophotography. There are many resources on the web for astrophotography, but crucial and useful details are often overlooked. This is a my astro-journal.

15 February 2012

My equipment

Before we get down to serious astro-business, it's probably best I say something about the equipment I’m using.  Note however, this blog is going to be very pragmatic, so in this post there is no discussion or explanations.  I will explain how and why I do things when the time comes. I want this blog to be useful, and not a theoretical exercise.

My telescope is a Celestron 6SE. A bunch of specs can be found here, but the key stuff is that it’s a 6” (150 mm) Schmidt-Cassegrain with a focal length of 1500mm.   

Celestron 6 SE


The aperture makes it very good for moon and planetary viewing, and the computerised Alt-Az mount is excellent for an intermediate viewing scope.  

The scope is not ideal for deep-sky astrophotography due to the mount setup.  In particular, as the mount is not equatorial the star-field in deep-sky observations will rotate – making long exposure images near impossible, and that’s not to mention the quality of extended tracking!  Note, however, the tracking is fine for visual observation.  I might have a bash at combating these hurdles in the future with a Wedge, but for the time being any deep-sky stuff will be done by stacking short exposure images, which avoid the tracking and field rotation problem.  The mount is not the only problem for deep-sky imaging – the scope is very slow for deep-sky i.e. much long exposures are needed.  I’ve alleviated this a little by attaching a Celestron focal reducer corrector f/6.3 – makes the scope ‘faster’ and the exposures required much shorter by ~3.  We’ll explore this in due time.

One day I might buy a complementary scope for deep sky astrophotography, but for the time being I’ll make the Celestron work.  This is one of the issues with astrophotography – there is no one-size fits all solution.  It depends what you want to do, and my telescope does planets, solar and Moon stuff very well.  Note however, NEVER EVER look at the sun through a telescope unless you have the appropriate equipment – not only would it break the optics, but it WILL blind you instantly.

In terms of other bits, I have:
9mm Meade Possl
25mm Celestron Plossl
Tele Vue Powermates 2.5x and 5x (1,25”)

For the taking of photos, I use:
Orion StarShoot Solar System Color Imager IV webcam (Good for Moon and planets)

Orion StarShoot Solar System Color Imager IV


Canon EOS 550D DSLR (deep-sky / other stuff) 

Canon EOS 550D

AND, don’t forget a Power Tank to power the telescope.  Batteries run down fast and ruin tracking!  Needless to say, a computer is needed to capture images from the webcam and process a night's observations, but I will get to software shortly.

Watch this space – my equipment list might get an update at some point ;)

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