Ah okie. So how was the experience? Do you think you will be going into astrophotography? A camera with a low mirror vibration is very important. That is why for planets where it is sufficiently bright, there are people going for high quality webcams instead of DSLRs.
Depending on how bright the moon is. Typical exposure is around 1/125~1/250", f/4 on ISO100. You can play around that EV. But do remember that your surrounding is not that bright and at that kind of exposure it's quite likely that it is will be quite underexposed.
Here is a 50% crop from the 12mp image. Didn't have a cable release so it was slightly blurred due to vibrations. At that kind of focal length, tripods/telescope mounts and camera vibration becomes very important.
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If no cable release, you can try setting the camera to timer mode
Ah okie. So how was the experience? Do you think you will be going into astrophotography? A camera with a low mirror vibration is very important. That is why for planets where it is sufficiently bright, there are people going for high quality webcams instead of DSLRs.
Nice.. Astrostack? Which webcam are you using? My scope is not on equatorial mount so I cannot do very long exposures with it unless the software is able to de-rotate (Alt-Az GOTO). I haven't been keeping up with it.
Nice.. Astrostack? Which webcam are you using? My scope is not on equatorial mount so I cannot do very long exposures with it unless the software is able to de-rotate (Alt-Az GOTO). I haven't been keeping up with it.