If you have difficulty finding your target, use Stellarium and place the phone against the back of the camera, and it will point you in the right direction. If you have a camera which has focus peeking, it will show even stars you cannot see with your eyes
2 important points are a good position where the sky is free from background light and the ground that has very less vibration. Arid, desolate places are good. After that,u can use any lens from 300mm upwards with these settings and u will get good shots.
I appreciate you being able to help break things down for beginners such as myself. I have a Canon 800d, this lens came with the kit,. Sure it may not be great BUT getting into AP is seriously expensive, and its nice to at least be able to use it until skills are refined and the wallet recovers.
Walt, Nice to make your acquaintance...Just found your channel..Good stuff...I have used both the Canon EF 75-300mm Kit Lens and The Sigma (Canon EF Mount) 75-300mm in my Astrophotography... While the Canon EF 75-300mm Kit Lens is cheap, I have found that between 135-200mm seems to be the sweet spot...It performs Ok...Not the best and not the worst..It did inspire me to Invest in The Sigma variant.... The Sigma version however is in a world all its own....It Performs very well even at 300mm, I think due to Real Good Glass and Quality Build.....The Focus seems to hold well....I wouldn't write off the Canon EF 75-300mm Kit Lens though. For Learning or Teaching its Ideal, especially basics. Even the 18-55mm Kit lens is useful.......Often I use my Old 300D and a 75-300mm on my Skytracker Pro to Teach my pals and give them an opportunity to take there own DSO Picture, and infect them with the bug to dive into the Hobby, to which I've made some " Converts".....I wouldn't Sacrifice that lens to the Gods....Save it and build a beginner's Rig to teach your pals....
This is meat. Whole meat with extra seasoning. Getting knowledge from experienced photographer is a bless. Stay healthy man, your knowledge would help other newbie out there!
Keep doing what you're doing Walt. Loving the videos from the UK. Just learning about this stuff and adding kit as I can afford to do so. Cloudy skys here so no Milky way test shots yet. Will try Andromedia from East Coast location as soon as I can. Hope to get Milky Way and Perseid meteor shower in August. Thank you again for some terrific videos!
Astro Backyard managed to get a great shot of 2 nebulas using this lens along with a affordable beginner dslr, and I’m impressed with the lens capability
Thank you for a simple yet great video. I have a 75/300 lens, i was to looking at a 300mm Canon lens IL lens today here in the UK at around £600 second hand, next clear night i think i will be hunting for Andromeda with the cheaper option. Clear skies.
Yeah it's all about having fun with what you have! And for that amount of money, I would consider looking at the Redcat 51 telescope! It would probably be better than a lens! And if you have a crop sensor camera it would be even more zoomed in! Clear skies!
I realize I'm a bit late to this party, but I found out that hooking up a mobile holder to a horse shoe adapter and sticking it on top of the camera (where the flash would go), booting up an app that shows up the start based on the phone's direction helps a ton with finding and identifying stars fast.
Great video, I understood everything more cleaer in this video, and hope to get out soon to begin getting some photos and actually get good at this hobby, I've had other hobbies but this is the one I am serious about and probably won't give up until I am physically unable, which will be never. But again great video one thing though, you caught me off guard with 6:13 'Ducktappee!'
It is a secret, but long exposure makes your crap lense a super lense. You can shoot through your window glass for the same reason, The glass quality means less on long exposures.
Its hard to fathom how a lens can be garbage when its capable of such a cool image on equipment that's not even designed for astrophotography in the first place... LOVE THE IMAGE❤❤❤❤❤ Edit: Star trackers are really just nightscape and time lapse devices that just scratch the surface of astrophotography so this image is quite the feat....
Dude, you're just too funny man, I love it ! A great content, exactly what I was looking for, I'm using old gears, just to start in astrophotography :) Thanks for this video
Love all of your videos. They have helped a ton. Also love the added humour. Btw, is it you who does the singing within the videos? Duct tape!! Sounds really good :)
Brilliant. Thank you for making this. Both educational and amusing. You're a great teacher. Tell me please, why 20 black photos of the lend cap as opposed to just one? Surely one contains all the blackness needed?
Taking more of them just gives a better average photo of what you will get once you have stacked them - this is what a stacking program like deep sky stacker will do for you
The startracker is the iOptron Skyguider Pro. My tripod is just some old heavy duty video tripod someone gave me a while back. For startrackers, I would recommend the iOptron 1.25" tripod.
I guess a Sigma 150-600 would be a major pain? Thanks for such a great channel. I am new to astrophotography. Admittedly, I suffer from G.A.S., but hopefully will get good results from all your information from you videos!
Also, how do you figure out the ISO setting? Like, for shutter speed, there is the NPF which gives you pinpoint stars. But what do you use as a standard to decide which ISO setting you should use? Especially with a star tracker. Or does ISO not matter? I know it matters when taking pictures of the moon. Does it really matter when you have a star tracker? How low is too low? How high is too high? How do you know if you are too low or too high with your ISO? Sorry for all the questions.
How to find the best time to shoot? I mean how will i know that my subject will be visible? I hope we can go shooting any day of the month. Thanks great content
OMG! That’s nice. Injustice wonder if I can make it with the same lens but with APSC device. I am using m6 and I am not sure if I will purchase full film 😢
I might sound desperate and stacking the odds against me but I plan on photographing the Andromeda galaxy from the southern hemisphere and with no tracker. Obviously, it would only appear very close to the horizon where I am and very briefly. I'll be using a 200mm prime lens on M4/3 so at least it will show up as a decent size. I know the quality of the final image won't be great (probably limited to 1 second exposures) but hopefully, I end up with something that will be recogniseable as the Andromeda galaxy. I'll take as many frames as possible within the short period of time that it will remain visible in my part of the world.
Edit: I guess I could try shooting the Andromeda galaxy on multiple nights over here (in South Australia) and build up a collection of frames over time. And then stack them.
Hello Walt. Being M31 now more visible at an acceptabile time of the night (01:00am in Italy), I'd like to try imaging it, using a tracker (Star Adventurer 2i). I'm using a D5600 Nikon dslr camera (1.5x crop factor) but I'm undecided about the lens. I could use a 500mm f/6.3 mirror lens (the usual cheap model by Kenko, Opteka, Walimex, etc), or an old but good Nikon 300mm f/4.5 AI-S. I'm interested in the lack of chromatic aberrations in mirror lenses, but I expect the overall quality of the nikon 300mm should be better. What would you suggest me? :) Thanks in advance :)
I am not sure if you are talking about the same stars, but I have found that if you find Cassiopeia, looks like a big M, the big point will point you to Andromeda.
@@deltaastrophotography yeah, I also use the front two stars of the Big Dipper and follow it in a line up till I see Polaris. I have been interested in the night sky my whole life, but it was just last year that I found out that I can take pictures using a DSLR. My biggest set back is that since I live east of the Mississippi, light pollution is a bitch. The best I can find is a high bortle 3 to a low bortle 4, but I have to drive 3 hours to get there. I'm currently saving to get a star tracker, either the 2i or GTi, not sure just yet. Then after I get that sorted and I'm familiar with the setup, then I'll focus on how I can neutralize the light pollution. Or find a way to image that ignores light pollution altogether. Then I can go after my main target, the Heart and Soul nebula!
Thanks for picking a great subject. After all most people have the 70-300mm. I refer to it as " The soccer mom lens" I thoroughly enjoyed your video for both the info and entertainment value. Looking forward to more of your content.
Thanks a lot! I just feel that people think they need to buy thousands of dollars worth of gear to shoot the stars. And that's just not true! It's all about having fun with what you have!
Great and timely video, as I will be trying this soon. Noob question: all the time you are focusing your lens and finding Andromeda, the tracker is already turned on (and tracking), right? Thanks!!
Would the Canon 55-250 be better? I wanted to try it without a tracker. So a ton of super short exposures. I cant afford the tracker right now so I have to work with what I got
I just picked up one of these lenses up for $70, and immediately thought, what did I do? I have a scope, but kind of wanted something quick, portable, and cheap, but was afraid I may have cheaped out too much. At least I now know I can get something out of it. I'm still relatively new to the hobby, so okay shots are good enough for me, for now.
I think that is going to be a great lens to photograph the Rho Ophiuchi Cloud Complex with this spring and summer! Especially if you have a star tracker. That's what one of my next videos will be about!
@@deltaastrophotography I have an EQ mounted telescope I can piggyback my DSLR on, BUT, I'm thinking about a portable tracker. One of the reasons to get a telephoto lens was to make my setup more portable, and a 40+lbs mount doesn't help that goal. Edit: I not only want to be able to more easily go to darker sky areas, I also want a quicker setup and teardown option at home, when I don't feel like dragging out my full-sized scope.
@@deltaastrophotography so, I have a hybrid, of sorts. I actually have a few Celestron scopes, a 70mm travelscope, a 76mm reflector, and a 114mm reflector. I picked them either used, or discounted. Honestly, I have less than $200 into all three of them combined! My mount is an old, heavy wooden tripod from a late 80's, or early 90's scope, with an after-the-fact motorized EQ3 which is not goto enabled. I don't know its branding, to be honest. I bought it off someone locally for $50, and given how heavy duty it was (it is built like a surveying tripod, and has an all metal EQ mount) I didn't really question. It works, and holds my scopes firm, and tracks good enough for visual, and basic astro photography. I have a Canon T3i camera with a 18-55 kit lens, and nifty 50 I picked up for $200, and now the 75-300. It's funny, at $70, it is probably the single largest investment I've made into my astronomy/astrophotography hobby up to this point. Haha. Edit: I should say I've probably invested more money in this hobby into good eyepieces, which I can use on any setup I get down the line. I have the idea of doing what I can with what I have, and trying to find deals along the way to upgrade. I'm not in a hurry to get to a desired goal, and therefore not looking to buy myself into a certain level. It's a journey, and I've learned a lot along the way, and have enjoyed myself the whole time, which is the most important aspect.
I’m tryna take a picture of the andromeda galaxy with my iPhone n a telescope but when I put the picture in deep sky stacker, the stacked image comes out all white n you can see the galaxy, n when I put it inna editin app it when I edit it doesn’t change. Any way I can fix this?
Yes! It's far more involved though. There's a guy named Nico on RUclips that is an expert on doing that. Here's a link to his video. ruclips.net/video/pXcRKoxTPVg/видео.html
Planets are a whole different animal! You do need a tracking mount but instead of doing long exposures, you take a video. Then each frame in the video can be stacked in software like Autostakkert. To get any kind of surface detail from the planet, you'll need a big telescope and a tracking mount that can hold the weight of that telescope! Large Newtonian telescopes and also scopes like the Celestron Edge HD are great for planets!
Yeah so you take multiple images to stack them to remove noise in software like Sequator or Deep Sky Stacker. But you can also take a few photos with the lens cap still on. Those images are just simply photographs of the noise. They are used to remove more noise in the stacking process! They are called dark frames. When taking dark frames, it's important to keep the exact same camera settings as your light frames and the camera has to be the same temperature as your other frames. That's why I always take my dark frames immediately after taking the rest of the photos.
If you have difficulty finding your target, use Stellarium and place the phone against the back of the camera, and it will point you in the right direction. If you have a camera which has focus peeking, it will show even stars you cannot see with your eyes
I use Stellarium too! It helps alot. Although it did lie to me when I tried to find Messier 30. Other than that, everything else was easy to find!
Focus peaking causes lot of blinks on the screen.
Walt, you never cease to amaze me! Bravo.
This is great! You're a natural at this, Walt! Definitely looking forward to seeing more of this
Space is full of wonders. It mesmerizes me every time.
2 important points are a good position where the sky is free from background light and the ground that has very less vibration. Arid, desolate places are good. After that,u can use any lens from 300mm upwards with these settings and u will get good shots.
I appreciate you being able to help break things down for beginners such as myself. I have a Canon 800d, this lens came with the kit,. Sure it may not be great BUT getting into AP is seriously expensive, and its nice to at least be able to use it until skills are refined and the wallet recovers.
im only 16 and working my butt off full and part time for a goto mount for my telescope (2k usd) 😂
I have the same camera but got an 18-55mm kit lens. How do you even get 75-300 as kit lens. Also, how you doing with the astrophotography.
Wow, great picture using a camera! Thanks for sharing your process.
Hey thanks a lot!
Walt, Nice to make your acquaintance...Just found your channel..Good stuff...I have used both the Canon EF 75-300mm Kit Lens and The Sigma (Canon EF Mount) 75-300mm in my Astrophotography... While the Canon EF 75-300mm Kit Lens is cheap, I have found that between 135-200mm seems to be the sweet spot...It performs Ok...Not the best and not the worst..It did inspire me to Invest in The Sigma variant.... The Sigma version however is in a world all its own....It Performs very well even at 300mm, I think due to Real Good Glass and Quality Build.....The Focus seems to hold well....I wouldn't write off the Canon EF 75-300mm Kit Lens though. For Learning or Teaching its Ideal, especially basics. Even the 18-55mm Kit lens is useful.......Often I use my Old 300D and a 75-300mm on my Skytracker Pro to Teach my pals and give them an opportunity to take there own DSO Picture, and infect them with the bug to dive into the Hobby, to which I've made some " Converts".....I wouldn't Sacrifice that lens to the Gods....Save it and build a beginner's Rig to teach your pals....
This is a phenominal, quick and very informative video. Thank you for this!
This is meat. Whole meat with extra seasoning. Getting knowledge from experienced photographer is a bless. Stay healthy man, your knowledge would help other newbie out there!
Keep doing what you're doing Walt. Loving the videos from the UK. Just learning about this stuff and adding kit as I can afford to do so. Cloudy skys here so no Milky way test shots yet. Will try Andromedia from East Coast location as soon as I can. Hope to get Milky Way and Perseid meteor shower in August. Thank you again for some terrific videos!
You nailed it. I've a 150-600mm Sigma and a MSM so I'm off to go and try!
Put that heavy sigma on the tiny MSM? Did it work for you?
I love it Walt. And esp the "duct tape" at the very end. I cracked up. Keep it up buddy. I subscribed.
Astro Backyard managed to get a great shot of 2 nebulas using this lens along with a affordable beginner dslr, and I’m impressed with the lens capability
Oh my goodness!! Walt, you are on🔥!! I just love this and you so much!!!! 💛💛💛💛 You are an amazing, gifted and super spacey, fascinating man!! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Thank you for a simple yet great video. I have a 75/300 lens, i was to looking at a 300mm Canon lens IL lens today here in the UK at around £600 second hand, next clear night i think i will be hunting for Andromeda with the cheaper option. Clear skies.
Yeah it's all about having fun with what you have! And for that amount of money, I would consider looking at the Redcat 51 telescope! It would probably be better than a lens! And if you have a crop sensor camera it would be even more zoomed in! Clear skies!
I am so glad I found your channel 🥰. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge! You've made my dreams of astrophotography come true❤️
I realize I'm a bit late to this party, but I found out that hooking up a mobile holder to a horse shoe adapter and sticking it on top of the camera (where the flash would go), booting up an app that shows up the start based on the phone's direction helps a ton with finding and identifying stars fast.
I have so much fun watching your videos 😂 and I learn a lot at the same time
The best video ever. I learned a lot . Laughed a lot. Great.
Don't forget to polar align the duct tape! 😜
And you named your puppy Sagan? ❤️
Yes! His name is Sagan! I think you're the first person to notice that!
Dude, you crack me up! Great astro photo video, thank you! 🇺🇸
I Love the bean can and beer bottle lens, I honestly think it the best lens out there.
Agreed. It can be a bit blurry, but you just need to drink more beer 😂
That is extremely cool!
Very nice. Thanks.
You ARE really funny when you present concepts. I enjoy your channel
Great video, I understood everything more cleaer in this video, and hope to get out soon to begin getting some photos and actually get good at this hobby, I've had other hobbies but this is the one I am serious about and probably won't give up until I am physically unable, which will be never. But again great video one thing though, you caught me off guard with 6:13 'Ducktappee!'
Stumbled upon this video and very impressed, needed a review about this lens. 🙌🏽🙌🏽
It's really great to know such tips and tricks. Good work Walk, subscribed !!
It is a secret, but long exposure makes your crap lense a super lense.
You can shoot through your window glass for the same reason, The glass quality means less on long exposures.
Dude. Yours is the first video I clicked for this tutorial. You’re hilarious. 😂
Man's other best friend, that is hilarious 😁
I mean.. What can't duct tape fix? lol!
Very cool! Amazing shot 👍🏼
Its hard to fathom how a lens can be garbage when its capable of such a cool image on equipment that's not even designed for astrophotography in the first place... LOVE THE IMAGE❤❤❤❤❤
Edit:
Star trackers are really just nightscape and time lapse devices that just scratch the surface of astrophotography so this image is quite the feat....
Really nice work!
I use a Nikon nikor 55 to 300 lense it’s amazing I love that lense it produces no chromatic aberration it’s amazing
You are awesome man !!!!! Great work thanks for sharing and we hope you keep doing what you doing
Thanks
This is extraordinary. Thank you
Awesome. What is the other galaxy in the background?
Dude, you're just too funny man, I love it ! A great content, exactly what I was looking for, I'm using old gears, just to start in astrophotography :)
Thanks for this video
Great vibes man ! Cheers!!!! 🍻
Thank you!
wow, you really made it fun to watch and really easy to understand, thank you and new subscriber:)
Love all of your videos. They have helped a ton. Also love the added humour. Btw, is it you who does the singing within the videos? Duct tape!! Sounds really good :)
Thank you! And that's me 😂
Awesome video man!!!
Thanks a lot!
Brilliant. Thank you for making this. Both educational and amusing. You're a great teacher. Tell me please, why 20 black photos of the lend cap as opposed to just one? Surely one contains all the blackness needed?
Taking more of them just gives a better average photo of what you will get once you have stacked them - this is what a stacking program like deep sky stacker will do for you
Amazing!!
Awesome fun to learn with u
Thanks! It's fun to talk about it!
Great video Walt
Interesting and entertaining
Fantastic !!! Thank you for this ! Can you tell me the tripod and startracker you are using ?
The startracker is the iOptron Skyguider Pro. My tripod is just some old heavy duty video tripod someone gave me a while back. For startrackers, I would recommend the iOptron 1.25" tripod.
I guess a Sigma 150-600 would be a major pain? Thanks for such a great channel. I am new to astrophotography. Admittedly, I suffer from G.A.S., but hopefully will get good results from all your information from you videos!
Also, how do you figure out the ISO setting? Like, for shutter speed, there is the NPF which gives you pinpoint stars. But what do you use as a standard to decide which ISO setting you should use? Especially with a star tracker. Or does ISO not matter? I know it matters when taking pictures of the moon. Does it really matter when you have a star tracker? How low is too low? How high is too high? How do you know if you are too low or too high with your ISO? Sorry for all the questions.
How to find the best time to shoot? I mean how will i know that my subject will be visible? I hope we can go shooting any day of the month. Thanks great content
Another awesome video 😃
OMG! That’s nice. Injustice wonder if I can make it with the same lens but with APSC device. I am using m6 and I am not sure if I will purchase full film 😢
If you have a star tracker it will look even better than a full frame camera! I rarely use full frame cameras on deep sky targets these days.
I might sound desperate and stacking the odds against me but I plan on photographing the Andromeda galaxy from the southern hemisphere and with no tracker. Obviously, it would only appear very close to the horizon where I am and very briefly. I'll be using a 200mm prime lens on M4/3 so at least it will show up as a decent size. I know the quality of the final image won't be great (probably limited to 1 second exposures) but hopefully, I end up with something that will be recogniseable as the Andromeda galaxy. I'll take as many frames as possible within the short period of time that it will remain visible in my part of the world.
Edit: I guess I could try shooting the Andromeda galaxy on multiple nights over here (in South Australia) and build up a collection of frames over time. And then stack them.
Awesome 👍👍👍
Niceee thanks I just bought my first 75mm to 300mm trying to learn how to use it for moon shots Thanks
I have a moon video coming out next week!
Great thanks looking forward to it
Very well done. Two thumbs up :-). Thanks
Thank you!
What camera are you using? - Megapixels? - What zoom? / 300mm?
Hello Walt. Being M31 now more visible at an acceptabile time of the night (01:00am in Italy), I'd like to try imaging it, using a tracker (Star Adventurer 2i). I'm using a D5600 Nikon dslr camera (1.5x crop factor) but I'm undecided about the lens. I could use a 500mm f/6.3 mirror lens (the usual cheap model by Kenko, Opteka, Walimex, etc), or an old but good Nikon 300mm f/4.5 AI-S. I'm interested in the lack of chromatic aberrations in mirror lenses, but I expect the overall quality of the nikon 300mm should be better. What would you suggest me? :) Thanks in advance :)
Great video, congratulation :)
May I suggest using painters tape versus duct tape there is less of that sticky residue
Yes lol! I actually started using electrical tape after I made this!
I am not sure if you are talking about the same stars, but I have found that if you find Cassiopeia, looks like a big M, the big point will point you to Andromeda.
Yeah different stars but thanks! That sounds much easier!
@@deltaastrophotography yeah, I also use the front two stars of the Big Dipper and follow it in a line up till I see Polaris. I have been interested in the night sky my whole life, but it was just last year that I found out that I can take pictures using a DSLR. My biggest set back is that since I live east of the Mississippi, light pollution is a bitch. The best I can find is a high bortle 3 to a low bortle 4, but I have to drive 3 hours to get there. I'm currently saving to get a star tracker, either the 2i or GTi, not sure just yet. Then after I get that sorted and I'm familiar with the setup, then I'll focus on how I can neutralize the light pollution. Or find a way to image that ignores light pollution altogether. Then I can go after my main target, the Heart and Soul nebula!
Thanks for picking a great subject. After all most people have the 70-300mm. I refer to it as " The soccer mom lens"
I thoroughly enjoyed your video for both the info and entertainment value. Looking forward to more of your content.
Thanks a lot! I just feel that people think they need to buy thousands of dollars worth of gear to shoot the stars. And that's just not true! It's all about having fun with what you have!
"This lens sucks."
[Leaves camera strap on]
You are a genius..
Glad I subscribed Great video 👍🤛
You just earned a sub
But for do the clear photos of Andromeda,moon,ecc..is necessary to have the star tracker??
My issue with this lens is that I have to stand very far to be able to take a full picture of someone. Wish I could remedy that issue.
Very helpful!
How did you set your.intervalometer? I can't seem to use mine above 30secs. The shutter remain open even after the set exposure time.
for more then 30 sec you have to put in "bulb mode"
Thank god you did not mess with the focus before taking the dark frames
It's so hard not to mess up the focus on that lens when putting the cap back on!
DUDE OMG!!!! Can you make it with a Lens Kit? 🥺🥺🙏🏻 with the 18-55 pleaseeee. 🥺🥺
I have made a video with that lens actually!! ruclips.net/video/fhuAM7w-WpU/видео.html Here you go!
@@deltaastrophotography OMG!!!! 😱😱😱
Thx bro.
Duct Take, turning “no no no” into “hmm hmm hmm” since 1946 😎👍🏼
Guess im eating beans and having a beer tonight
Just to be sure, did you polar align before focusing on Jupiter?
Great and timely video, as I will be trying this soon. Noob question: all the time you are focusing your lens and finding Andromeda, the tracker is already turned on (and tracking), right? Thanks!!
Yeah I usually have it on when I'm searching for the object. I don't want to lose it once I finally get it in frame!
@@deltaastrophotography thank you for the quick reply!
Would the Canon 55-250 be better? I wanted to try it without a tracker. So a ton of super short exposures. I cant afford the tracker right now so I have to work with what I got
Dope!
Thanks Man!!
Is a 18-55mm lens good enough for this and a canon Rebel t100?
Looks like your using the iOptron SkyTracker pro camera mount???
It's the iOptron Skyguider Pro!
There are cheap zoom lenses that have focal lengths in the thousands. Are those good?
Usually no. Having 1000mm lens is usually bad because heat waves gets in the way anyways.
Hey mate... what star tracker do you use/ recommend. Thanks!
I just picked up one of these lenses up for $70, and immediately thought, what did I do? I have a scope, but kind of wanted something quick, portable, and cheap, but was afraid I may have cheaped out too much. At least I now know I can get something out of it. I'm still relatively new to the hobby, so okay shots are good enough for me, for now.
I think that is going to be a great lens to photograph the Rho Ophiuchi Cloud Complex with this spring and summer! Especially if you have a star tracker. That's what one of my next videos will be about!
@@deltaastrophotography I have an EQ mounted telescope I can piggyback my DSLR on, BUT, I'm thinking about a portable tracker. One of the reasons to get a telephoto lens was to make my setup more portable, and a 40+lbs mount doesn't help that goal.
Edit: I not only want to be able to more easily go to darker sky areas, I also want a quicker setup and teardown option at home, when I don't feel like dragging out my full-sized scope.
@@BuckeyeStormsProductions Yeah I don't blame you! What mount and scope do you have?
@@deltaastrophotography so, I have a hybrid, of sorts. I actually have a few Celestron scopes, a 70mm travelscope, a 76mm reflector, and a 114mm reflector. I picked them either used, or discounted. Honestly, I have less than $200 into all three of them combined! My mount is an old, heavy wooden tripod from a late 80's, or early 90's scope, with an after-the-fact motorized EQ3 which is not goto enabled. I don't know its branding, to be honest. I bought it off someone locally for $50, and given how heavy duty it was (it is built like a surveying tripod, and has an all metal EQ mount) I didn't really question. It works, and holds my scopes firm, and tracks good enough for visual, and basic astro photography. I have a Canon T3i camera with a 18-55 kit lens, and nifty 50 I picked up for $200, and now the 75-300. It's funny, at $70, it is probably the single largest investment I've made into my astronomy/astrophotography hobby up to this point. Haha.
Edit: I should say I've probably invested more money in this hobby into good eyepieces, which I can use on any setup I get down the line. I have the idea of doing what I can with what I have, and trying to find deals along the way to upgrade. I'm not in a hurry to get to a desired goal, and therefore not looking to buy myself into a certain level. It's a journey, and I've learned a lot along the way, and have enjoyed myself the whole time, which is the most important aspect.
I’m tryna take a picture of the andromeda galaxy with my iPhone n a telescope but when I put the picture in deep sky stacker, the stacked image comes out all white n you can see the galaxy, n when I put it inna editin app it when I edit it doesn’t change. Any way I can fix this?
1:20 earned my sub 🤣🌌💓
Canon 700d + yongnuo 50mm f1.8
ISO 100 + 30sec shutter = astrophotography :))
I just gave you your 1,000th "Like", and I'm going out tonight to give it a try.
Did u use any guiding tools?
I saw a 1000mm Soviet lens online. I DARE YA HAHHAHAHA.
Oh really? Is this a challenge? Lol! Sounds fun!
@@deltaastrophotography YES PLEASE HAHAHAHHAH
What was the camera body?
Wow Man Thank You a lot
Is it also possible with out a star trekker ?
Yes! It's far more involved though. There's a guy named Nico on RUclips that is an expert on doing that. Here's a link to his video. ruclips.net/video/pXcRKoxTPVg/видео.html
Great
Will the tracker let you take long exposures of the planets as well? Thanks for your videos
Planets are a whole different animal! You do need a tracking mount but instead of doing long exposures, you take a video. Then each frame in the video can be stacked in software like Autostakkert. To get any kind of surface detail from the planet, you'll need a big telescope and a tracking mount that can hold the weight of that telescope! Large Newtonian telescopes and also scopes like the Celestron Edge HD are great for planets!
wait, you took pictures with the lens cap on? i got lost there
Yeah so you take multiple images to stack them to remove noise in software like Sequator or Deep Sky Stacker. But you can also take a few photos with the lens cap still on. Those images are just simply photographs of the noise. They are used to remove more noise in the stacking process! They are called dark frames. When taking dark frames, it's important to keep the exact same camera settings as your light frames and the camera has to be the same temperature as your other frames. That's why I always take my dark frames immediately after taking the rest of the photos.
@@deltaastrophotography awsome, thanks for explaining!
So… an 800mm on FF to frame Andromeda?
4:17 men trying to find the right hole
😂😂
For anyone looking to buy one the usm mark II is actually a much nicer lense than the mark 3 image quality wise