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- This topic has 9 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 7 years, 9 months ago by David Dunn.
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23 February 2017 at 5:59 pm #573704David DunnParticipant
Hi all,
I like to take wide field images of the night sky. Until now I have been using a fixed camera on a tripod. This limits me to 2-3 second exposures with a 150 mm lens.
I have been looking at star trackers as a possible way forward. There are two models which seem popular:
Astrotrac
Vixen Polarie
I am sure there are others.
I would welcome any comment/advice from members on the options above.
Many thanks
David
23 February 2017 at 6:01 pm #577965David DunnParticipantMy apologies! Cutting and pasting doesn’t work from word.
David
24 February 2017 at 6:21 am #577967Paul Anthony BrierleyParticipantI can recommend the Skywatcher Star Adventurer.
It is very well built and can handle, small telescopes in the 66mm range. Polar alignment is also easy, with a phone app, that shows the position of Polaris.
I own one.
24 February 2017 at 9:20 am #577968David BaseyParticipantHi David,
I have a Vixen Polarie and am extremely satisfied with it. You can see a couple of results on my Member’s Page.
Clearly polar alignment is key. The polar sight has a field diameter of 8.9deg, I’ve attached a copy of a table from the manual showing the permitted exposure times assuming you can align on the pole to within 2deg.
If you intend to use longer focal lengths or much longer exposures I can recommend the optional polar alignment scope which is a very solid piece of kit.
Lastly, with longer focal lengths and exposure times you need a really solid tripod to mount it on. That much is obvious, less obvious to me was the need for a really tall one otherwise you end up kneeling on the cold and wet ground to align the device.
Hope this helps, if you want to ask anything else feel free to drop me an e-mail.
David
24 February 2017 at 11:46 am #577969Dominic FordKeymasterHi David,
I’m afraid pasting from MS Word can be a bit of a minefield, yes. Word includes all sorts of superfluous formatting information when you paste into a web browser. The BAA forum is supposed to strip all of that out and just leave your text, but sometimes it doesn’t do a very good job of it.
I’ve done a quick edit on your post to remove some of the junk, and hopefully not too much of your actual text.
I personally tend to paste text from MS Word into MS Notepad, and then from there into the website. Notepad is a really simple no-frills text editor, and completely removes any formatting which may cause problems!
Best wishes,
Dominic.
25 February 2017 at 12:29 pm #577970DawsonParticipantFor this kind of money, if you don’t have to lug it up a mountain, what about a tracking equatorial mount like an HEQ5?
James
25 February 2017 at 9:43 pm #577971Callum PotterKeymasterHi David,
I don’t use one myself, but other options to consider are the
Ioptron SkyTracker – i’ve seen a lot of good images made using these.
Other newer things to think about are:
Ioptron SkyTracker Pro – more ‘heavy weight’
And something new I saw recently mentioned in Astronomy Now is the
SkyWatcher Star Adventurer Mini.
Would be interested to hear from anyone that’s tried these newer mounts.
Thanks, Callum
26 February 2017 at 4:38 pm #577980David DunnParticipantHi All,
Thank you for all the help and advice you offered. I think I need to sit down and go through all the info. In the mean time I am still working on my fixed camera Messier survey. See the members pages.
All the best
David
28 February 2017 at 3:15 pm #577997Roy HughesParticipantDavid,
Home made devices might do as well(?).
Quote from a much earlier post, re. devices we made in the 1960-70s:
‘In 1974, vol 84, no 3 (April) page 189 D. G. Daniels describes a similar device looking a bit more like the one I built (long since gone to the scrapbox in the sky). If you’ve got a fast connection you can download a copy from the BAA (6.57Mb) a real blast from the past. If you do, then, rather than spend hours trying to scroll to the right issue do a search for time-switch (the “-” IS important!)’
Roy.
28 February 2017 at 4:06 pm #577998David DunnParticipantRoy,
Thanks for the info. I will download the reference.
David -
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