Got my First Telescope | Celestron Sky Prodigy 130 | Astrophotography

In summary, the new astronomer was told to get into the habit of doing a observing diary, which will help him learn about his equipment, and optimize his observing techniques.
  • #1
Glenstr
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Over the last year or so I've been thinking seriously about getting a telescope, having my eye on the Celestron Nexstar 6SE model or getting a slightly smaller 5" model that's more automated for about the same price.

Well, yesterday my mind got made up for me as it was my birthday & my wife got me a Celestron Sky Prodigy 130 like this one. She said I could exchange it for another if I had something else in mind, I briefly considered perhaps the 6" model but I think the 130 should suffice nicely and the automation feature is probably good for a newbie like myself.

The main reason she picked this one was that she was under the impression that I I could combine my photography hobby with this one, because it has a built in digital camera. However it turns out the digital camera it has is used for alignment purposes only, not for astrophotography, so I think she was a little mislead by the "built in digital camera" in the advertising.

Anyway, brings me to (one of ) my question(s)

I'm see there is a camera attachment from Celestron available here, would this be sufficient for getting started in astrophotography? If not - what would be?

After unboxing yesterday I was aiming it across the lake from where I live and expected the image to be inverted, but it's inverted with about a 30 degree tilt. I could find nothing in the manual about terrestrial viewing, do I need to get a different eyepiece or adapter for terrestrial use?

thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
The angle is due to the relative position of the eyepiece on the tube. If the tube can be rotated such that the eyepiece is at the very top then the image would be 0 degrees (but still inverted). A bit awkard to look through and you may need a step to stand on. Or rotate it 90 degrees such that the eyepiece comes off at the side... then the image would be OK as well. Not much can be done about that.

It's been a while since I played with reflectors so I may be wrong at one or the other position. With a wedge eyepiece adaptor you may be able to 'right' the image further.

If you can mount a small webcam on the eyepiece it can be rotated to compensate.
 
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  • #3
Glenstr said:
<snip>Well, yesterday my mind got made up for me as it was my birthday & my wife got me a Celestron Sky Prodigy 130 like this one. She said I could exchange it for another if I had something else in mind, I briefly considered perhaps the 6" model but I think the 130 should suffice nicely and the automation feature is probably good for a newbie like myself.
<snip>

I think that's probably an excellent starting scope- have fun! As for your camera insert, that should also be just fine for starting out.
 
  • #4
Glenstr said:
After unboxing yesterday I was aiming it across the lake from where I live and expected the image to be inverted, but it's inverted with about a 30 degree tilt. I could find nothing in the manual about terrestrial viewing, do I need to get a different eyepiece or adapter for terrestrial use?
The traditional way to do terrestrial observing through a Newtonian is to aim the scope and then turn your back on the object before you put your eye to the eyepiece. You might still have to tip your head a little to get it perfect. You can get image erectors, but why bother when it's this simple?
 
  • #5
You have a fine and practical scope there, even if it isn't capable of 'Hubble quality' photographs.
 
  • #6
Glenstr said:
Well, yesterday my mind got made up for me as it was my birthday & my wife got me a Celestron Sky Prodigy 130 like this one. She said I could exchange it for another if I had something else in mind, I briefly considered perhaps the 6" model but I think the 130 should suffice nicely and the automation feature is probably good for a newbie like myself.

lucky you, that's awesome and a great scope to get started into astronomy. Beware tho ... as you grow in the hobby, aperture fever will strike you :smile:
and there will be this ongoing urge to get scopes with larger apertures.
In reality, tho it's nice to have a 12 or 14 inch mirror scope. The real ideal max size, for most serious amateur astronomers, is around the 8 - 10 inch diameter mirror
its the good trade-off for having a scope that is still reasonably transportable in the avg family car :smile:

looking forward to hearing and seeing your exploits as time goes by

Am going to suggest to you what I told another new astronomer earlier today.
Get into the habit of doing a observing diary. Do it for EVERY time you purposely go out under the stars
be it to do unaided looking around, say for meteors or with binoculars or with the scope
Its great to have a diary to refer back to as the years go by and say compare observations with earlier scopes with the latest and greatest scope you have

a couple of excerpts from my one ( NOTE the tabs formatting was lost copying and pasting to the forum)
your ideas for layout will probably be different :wink: ... I just use a word doc file2005
Date Time (EST)

Object Constell. Comments
July 2005
From Home

03 1600

Sun Many spots visible clear umbral and penumbral regions visible

1830-1900

Jupiter 2 moons, 4 belts visible good viewing overhead
Mercury low in West a bit fuzzy
Venus low in West, bit fuzzy, looked gibbous phase
Omega Cent Glob; Ex.Brt, clear easily resolved
NGC6121/M4 Glob; Just resolvable
NGC6475/M7 Op Cl;

2015-2100

NGC6405/M6 Op Cl;
NGC6388 Glob; Mag6.7, Just resolvable, small, compact
NGC6514/M20 Trifid Nebula; Fnt, just visible
NGC6531/M21 Op Cl; Brt

--------------

2013Jan. 04 … got the CPC925 out to see if I could see Comet C/2012 K5 (LINEAR)
I was out the nite before with binoculars and thought I had found it
But using the scope tonite, I found I had been looking at M37 and or M36
A couple of faint fuzzy open clusters that the binoculars couldn’t resolve
into individual stars but the scope did.

After 2 hours of searching, I finally found it at the location it should be.
This comet was definitely not visible in binoculars as had been reported. It was a very faint fuzzy blob in the scope with a 40mm eyepiece.
Estimated magnitude at ~ 9.5 – 10.
Jupiter also looked really good during this time

May 10 … Partial Solar eclipse. Viewed and Photo'ed from Thornleigh

Aug 16–20 Nova Delphini. The nova appeared with a magnitude 6.8 when it was discovered and peaked at magnitude 4.3 on 16 August.
Viewed from home and from Bobbinhead Rd, jst N of Sydney. Photo’ed from Bobbinhead Rd,cheers
Dave
 
  • #7
Adding to dave's post, most people find anything over about 10" to be a beast. The damn mount is like a national monument. And the scope is so jittery without a massive mount it is nearly useless. So don't let aperature fever overcome your good sense. If you have a permanent observatory I may concede a few inches.
 
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  • #8
In addition to size/weight constraints, if the user is located in a place with poor 'seeing' (say, Cleveland OH) there's not much point in a large aperture- I would get slightly brighter fuzzy blobs, but no additional resolution.
 
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  • #9
but if you are going to go big, one day make it worthwhile 30", f5 :wink:

from the recent Queensland Astrofest (Star party)

Terry Lovejoy ( of Comet Lovejoy fame -- earlier this year) took this pic of his friend Renato Langersek.and his scope

big scope.jpg
 
  • #10
Missing the lift chair.
 
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  • #12
Thanks for all the great replies, suggestions & advice everyone - it's been awhile since I visited this board and I forgot about this post!

I've managed to get the telescope out twice since the post, one night I set it up, just used manual control & got some good looks at the waxing gibbous moon in its later phases, then I went on vacation and the weather has been crappy but I managed to get it out last weekend on a clear night and try the built in computer functions.

Where I live I'm surrounded by mostly deciduous forest on each side, so I took it out on my back north facing deck to see if the align feature would work. My house is a two storey so I was pretty well restricted to a straight north view. I pressed the align button anyway, and it took awhile and read it wasn't able to find stars once or twice, but it eventually finished. I then pointed it at Polaris and it showed a bright star not quite in the centre of the view, I adjusted it manually to center it, then had it find the Andromeda galaxy and it found (what I'm pretty sure is) that too, again just a bit off centre. I was using the 9mm eyepiece only because I forgot where I put the 25mm one, but I could see a fuzzy glob of stars, I wasn't sure if I should be able to see the galaxy arms or not.

For the targets not being centered I'm not sure of it's a camera calibration issue or not.

One thing I don't like is the big bulky D cell battery pack that powers the motors, I actually dropped it by accident the first use and broke the wire off and had to solder it back. I think I may have found a better solution though, I fly RC planes and multicopters and a lot of this flying is FPV so I already had a barrel connector (the same size as the one on the batter back) for my 19" TV modified with a lipo battery connector so I can power the TV for remote viewing with one of my 3 cell 12V LiPo batteries. I have a lot of these batteries so I'll just put a square of velcro on the telescope mount somewhere then I can attach a small 12v LiPo to it and save a ton of weight and not have to worry about wrapping the cord etc.

As for cameras, I'm wondering if it's worth my while spending a few more bucks to get this one, or this one - instead of this one - thoughts?
 
  • #13
Glenstr: your links result in "Parameter 'out' is required." There are myriad ways to approach a new hobby. My hobby is dabbling. I'm not an amateur astronomer/sky watcher, so there's got to be millions of people more knowledgeable...Anyway, chances are you are going to want a mobile telescope. The bigger it is, the less mobile it is. The more expensive it is, the less you'll want to toss it in the back of the car and take off. (OMG, if that doesn't sound scary, both for breaking the scope, and for theft issues, then you don't live on the same planet as I do). So while you may have a place for setting up the scope near-by, you need to consider more than just simply what "the best" camera is. IMHO, 21st century astronomy isn't about visual sighting, its about video capture. Having a "retro" scope is ok. (Do you also use "box" cameras?) What you spend your time doing is up to you. As you probably know, eyeball astronomy is (virtually all) "black and white". To get the color, you need time and so you need a digital scope. Depending on your expendable income, you may choose to go whole hog into a hobby before you actually know if its for you. There's lots of used equipment out there that attest to that. Which suggests a more cautious approach (buy used). But yeah, new is definitely more sexy than "preowned". As I mentioned, your links lead to dead ends for me, not sure if its my issue on this site or the site's policies, I usually run into the same problem here.
Oh, two more comments, and again, take them for what they're worth:
If you don't have stellarium on your PC, get it (or similar, Stellarium is free, and fantastic, imho)
The considerations of astronomy rapidly diverge from terrestrial photography. One set up probably will have too many compromises for anyone serious about either. As a beginner, you will quickly figure this out.
Last time (several years ago) I priced out what I thought a minimum system (astronomy) system would cost (for me) it was between 3k-4k US$, fwiw. But ymmv and again its not about getting the best, its about growing into it so you can have fun and be pleased with what you're doing with it. You'll not get (astronomical) shots to equal Hubble's anytime soon, LOL. Any I do think that photographs would make a fantasitc scrap-book. (Digital, or even hard copy). Often the progression is Lunar, Planetary, Stellar, then extragalactic, but that's arbitrary...
 
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  • #14
Glenstr said:
Where I live I'm surrounded by mostly deciduous forest on each side, so I took it out on my back north facing deck to see if the align feature would work. My house is a two storey so I was pretty well restricted to a straight north view. I pressed the align button anyway, and it took awhile and read it wasn't able to find stars once or twice, but it eventually finished.

ALWAYS pick the 3 brightest stars you can see. If you happened to pic fainter stars, that would be a good reason it took so long to get an alignment

Glenstr said:
For the targets not being centred I'm not sure of it's a camera calibration issue or not.

most likely was your not quite getting the alignment stars dead centre in the view as you did your alignment process

The other good probability was that you didn't have your mount well levelled before starting your alignment process
this can really throw things out

Glenstr said:
I then pointed it at Polaris and it showed a bright star not quite in the centre of the view, I adjusted it manually to center it,

doing that adjustment would have thrown your alignment out ... if your 3 star alignment was done correctly, Polaris WONT be dead centre, Polaris isn't exactly right on the pole

Do your 3 star alignment again
Glenstr said:
One thing I don't like is the big bulky D cell battery pack that powers the motors, I actually dropped it by accident the first use and broke the wire off and had to solder it back. I think I may have found a better solution though, I fly RC planes and multicopters and a lot of this flying is FPV so I already had a barrel connector (the same size as the one on the batter back) for my 19" TV modified with a lipo battery connector so I can power the TV for remote viewing with one of my 3 cell 12V LiPO batteries. I have a lot of these batteries so I'll just put a square of velcro on the telescope mount somewhere then I can attach a small 12v LiPo to it and save a ton of weight and not have to worry about wrapping the cord etc.

yup LiPO's are much smaller for the equiv amount of power

Glenstr said:
As for cameras, I'm wondering if it's worth my while spending a few more bucks to get this one, or this one - instead of this one - thoughts?

for something more than just planets, the first one would be the best start for you and is quite reasonably priced as an intro camera
The other 2 are primarily planetary/Lunar cameras and are not likely to perform overly well on deep space objectscheers
Dave
 
  • #15
Thanks - this particular telescope has an auto align, where you just press the align button and it will automatically search the sky until it finds enough stars to get its bearing. I did some more reading on it and found that it's best to have it aimed at a clear section of sky (likely aimed at a bright star, as you suggest) as far left as possible, as it will skew to the right in its search. The first time I let it auto align I did not do that.
 
  • #16
ahhh ok
to be honest, am not a fan of the total auto align, hence why I use the semi-manual 3 star align
where it asks you to point to a star, it ackn's that then the next and the next. Then it does its
calculations and works out where it is

my scope, also a Celestron with the Al/Az mount and hand controller
it mite be worth trying a 3 star align :smile:
As I commented, adjusting alignment to get Polaris centred would have put the alignment out

keep posting in this thread as you progress and let us know how you are getting on. Anything I can do to help, I will

cheers
Dave
 
  • #17
Thanks for the suggestions, I plan on trying the manual aligning too, might work better with limited sky as well.

Another thing I just thought of - unless I'm mistaken this telescope also tracks the stars, in that it will keep them in view & correct for the Earth's rotation. I'm thinking I should be able to fashion a mount somehow for a camera (where there's room), for example my Sony Nex 5 or A5100, and use it for longer exposures of the Milky Way etc.?
 
  • #18
Glenstr said:
Another thing I just thought of - unless I'm mistaken this telescope also tracks the stars, in that it will keep them in view & correct for the Earth's rotation. I'm thinking I should be able to fashion a mount somehow for a camera (where there's room), for example my Sony Nex 5 or A5100, and use it for longer exposures of the Milky Way etc.?

yes, this is correct, its the whole point of doing the alignment. BUT there is a huge caveat ( limitation)
There's something you may not have heard about called field rotation and this is not a problem for visual observing BUT is
a problem for doing long exposures, anything over around 30 secs

Field rotation is what happens to the object as seen through the scope, where the field of view rotates.
This happens because the scope isn't tracking the true motion of the star/object across the sky.
Stars and other deep space objects move in an arc across the sky rather than straight lines and
because of the Altitude / azimuth tracking of the scope it tracks the star/object in a series of small steps
rather than a smooth arc

will let you digest that whilst I draw a diagram to add to the text ...
 
  • #19
Glenstr said:
Another thing I just thought of - unless I'm mistaken this telescope also tracks the stars, in that it will keep them in view & correct for the Earth's rotation. I'm thinking I should be able to fashion a mount somehow for a camera (where there's room), for example my Sony Nex 5 or A5100, and use it for longer exposures of the Milky Way etc.?

OK ...
star trail arcs ...

star-trails-26.jpg


star-trails-25.jpg


Al/Az tracking... rough drawing

track.GIF


to track stars in a smooth arc, a different type of mount is used called an EQUATORIAL mount
This type of mount is aligned to the north or south celestial pole ( depending on if you live in the nthrn or sthrn hemisphere)

See that top pic and how everything is rotating around a central point ? that star near the centre ... yes, Polaris ... one of the scope's axis is aligned to the pole and the other axis will then track the true star motion across the sky
Dave
 
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  • #20
Glenstr said:
For the targets not being centered I'm not sure of it's a camera calibration issue or not.

It's unlikely that particular mount will place every target near-dead center every time. My $1400 mount I use for astrophotography doesn't even center targets that well. (Which sucks for imaging)

Glenstr said:
As for cameras, I'm wondering if it's worth my while spending a few more bucks to get this one, or this one - instead of this one - thoughts?

Based purely off of a quick look at the specs for each, and no experience using any of them, I'd probably go with the middle one. The large sensor will make it easier to find your targets and having more pixels gives you more options than having fewer. Trust me, trying to find your target using a tiny sensor is extremely frustrating. One thing I'd do before purchasing is make sure you can still get a color image while the camera is binned 2x2 or 4x4.

Note that all three are designed solely for planetary/solar imaging. They will not work well for deep sky imaging of galaxies and nebulae.
 
  • #21
The most annoying feature of intro ccd cameras is the tiny sensor size.. A DSLR camera is a viable option and will only set you back about $400 . It is also a lot easier to sell your wife on because it does double duty for family and vacation pictures. I tried an intro ccd camera and ultimately converted it into a guide camera. The photos you can get with a good digital camera often rival or even surpass those of far more expensive ccd's. If you get hooked on AP you can always upgrade to a pricy ccd without going through the AP learning curve all over again. For discussion see http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronomy-equipment/deep-sky-astrophotography-with-a-dslr/
 
  • #22
Indeed. You can't go wrong with a DSLR camera, especially if you like to take photos of stuff other than space.
 
  • #23
Glenstr said:
<snip>Another thing I just thought of - unless I'm mistaken this telescope also tracks the stars, in that it will keep them in view & correct for the Earth's rotation. I'm thinking I should be able to fashion a mount somehow for a camera (where there's room), for example my Sony Nex 5 or A5100, and use it for longer exposures of the Milky Way etc.?

Folks here with a lot more experience than I have posted excellent replies regarding cameras/detectors, and I don't disagree with anything anyone has said. Even so, let me provide a different perspective.

First, it all depends on what you want to image- there is no such thing as a 'best camera' or 'best detector'. If you are imaging bright objects, such as the moon and planets, your optimal solution is likely a detector with very small pixels and a high frame rate- the sensors found in cell phones, for example. Then, you are able to acquire 200-300 images within a few seconds and stack them together, quickly producing an image with an extremely high signal-to-noise ratio and fairly high spatial resolution. Based on what I saw, any of the inexpensive sensors you linked to would likely be good solutions here.

For imaging faint objects tho, you'll need a sensor that has both larger pixels and lower noise than a cell phone. And while some people (aside from scientists) opt for specialized cooled sensors, it makes a lot of sense to use a digital camera. Adapting a digital camera to a telescope is pretty easy to do- there are inexpensive adapter plates to couple pretty much any digital camera to any telescope. Personally, I don't actually own a telescope- it's a telephoto lens. I use an adapter plate that couples my camera directly to a tracking mount, so I can use any of my lenses to image the night sky. I agree with davenn's comment regarding image rotation with an alt-az mount, but it's unclear (to me) what the performance limit (longest exposure time) is. Regardless, I have difficulty using my wide-angle lens even with an equatorial mount- the effect is hard to describe, but it's basically the same problem that cartographers have: mapping a curved surface to a flat surface. Here's a stack of 60 images, taken with a stationary tripod:

fov6_filtered.tif%20RGB_zpst9te9ss8.jpg


The distortion introduced by mapping the curved sky to a flat plane results in the non-uniform radial 'streaking'. Panoramic stitching is also difficult:

fov5_filtered%20-%20fov31_filtered_fused_zpsalsulou6.jpg


It may be hard to see because of the down-sizing, but there are regions that have multiple non-overlapping images of the same stars, seen here:

fov5_filtered%20-%20fov31_filte111red_fused_zpsooe6nyyi.jpg


This is not due to the star streaks seen above, but the way neighboring images have different distortions; I'm still fine-tuning the alignment and hope to get a better final image at some point.
 
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  • #24
Chronos said:
The most annoying feature of intro ccd cameras is the tiny sensor size.. A DSLR camera is a viable option and will only set you back about $400 . It is also a lot easier to sell your wife on because it does double duty for family and vacation pictures. I tried an intro ccd camera and ultimately converted it into a guide camera. The photos you can get with a good digital camera often rival or even surpass those of far more expensive ccd's. If you get hooked on AP you can always upgrade to a pricy ccd without going through the AP learning curve all over again. For discussion see http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronomy-equipment/deep-sky-astrophotography-with-a-dslr/
Drakkith said:
Indeed. You can't go wrong with a DSLR camera, especially if you like to take photos of stuff other than space.
in general, yes and yes in both cases, with some limitations, but the scope that the OP has got is reasonably small and hanging a moderately heavy DSLR off it may not be the best thing for it both for balancing and drive motors of this small mount.
A 8" scope and its much sturdier Al/Az or EQ mount wouldn't have so much of an issueDave
 
  • #25
Andy Resnick said:
. I agree with davenn's comment regarding image rotation with az-el mount, but it's unclear (to me) what the performance limit (longest exposure time) is.

I find that even with the camera and a 200mm lens field rotation is significant even over 30 sec exposures
and by the time I take 10 - 20 exposures and stack them, I loose a signif amount of the outer regions of the frames eg ...

xx.GIF


The image stacking program, eg, DSS Deep Sky Stacker will look at common stars in each frame and rotate the frames to get those stars to line up
As you can see, you get a progressively smaller central area FOV
 
  • #26
The result of all this is the reason why I recently lashed out and purchased a sturdy Equatorial mount
http://www.bintel.com.au/Mounts---Tripods/EQ-Mounts/Sky-Watcher-HEQ5-Pro-GoTo-Mount/96/productview.aspx

a HEQ5 PRO
ED80-HEQ5_3.jpg


minus the telescope ... I may yet add a scope to the mount
initially it will be used as a camera platform with either my 70 - 200mm or 100 - 400mm Canon lenses on the Canon 5D Mk3 DSLR camera

I also bought one of these auto guider units at the same time ...
a 50mm scope and ccd camera. you can see one attached to the top of the scope in the above pic
createimage1.png


It will sit on a bracket beside the camera. Two cables from the auto guider
1) a USB lead that supplies power to the camera and an image to software for selecting a guide star
2) a cable between the auto guider and the main drive control of the mount where it passes tracking corrections to the mount drive

this will allow me to do multiple, say, 5 minute exposures which will hugely surpass the 30 sec exposure limitations I'm currently stuck with on the Al/Az mountcheers
Dave
 
  • #27
davenn said:
<snip>

I also bought one of these auto guider units at the same time ...
a 50mm scope and ccd camera. you can see one attached to the top of the scope in the above pic
View attachment 89035

It will sit on a bracket beside the camera. Two cables from the auto guider
1) a USB lead that supplies power to the camera and an image to software for selecting a guide star
2) a cable between the auto guider and the main drive control of the mount where it passes tracking corrections to the mount drive

this will allow me to do multiple, say, 5 minute exposures which will hugely surpass the 30 sec exposure limitations I'm currently stuck with on the Al/Az mountcheers
Dave

I've thought about getting an autoguider, but I'm not sure it makes sense (for me):

1) how much added equipment is there (laptop, etc)? It is really plug-n-play, or is there a learning curve? Right now total setup time from lugging stuff from my house to acquiring image #1 is about 10 minutes, does setting up the autoguider slow the process down?

2) I think my main problem is ring-down vibration, not tracking error- but it's hard to tell. With my 400mm, I am limited to approximately 13s exposures (and that's after waiting 5-7 seconds after the mirror flips up), but with my 85mm and 15mm lenses, I can take 30s exposures easily; I can 'bulb' expose using the 15mm until the sky background becomes obnoxious (about 2 minutes at f2.8, ISO 400).

3) actually, last night I noticed a problem that has been there all along, I've only recently gotten good enough to notice it- and I hope this isn't off-topic (if it is, maybe we can start a 'troubleshooting' thread...). Here's as many details as possible:

I typically setup as soon as it's dark enough, which is about 1 hour past sundown; after mount balancing and alignment I carefully focus the lens and lock it down. From there, I have about 1 hour of images that are *really* good- near diffraction limited. Then the images start to blur. Not motion blur and not focus drift- I'm not sure if it's thermal issues with the lens cooling down, or thermal problems with the atmosphere cooling down. Honestly, I'm not sure what the problem is.

Here's a crop from an 'early' image:

DSC09464_zps5lytycvz.jpg


And a crop from an image acquired about 1 hour later- same lens and camera settings, and this is *after* I verified best focus:

DSC09551_zps8quhn21t.jpg


Any advice is appreciated...
 
  • #28
Lot's of great input - thanks everyone.

I have a couple of DSLR's (K10D & K-x ) & compact system camera's (Sony NEX-5N & A5100) that I could use if there are adapters that will fit my telescope. All the camera's have the same size APS-C sensor but I'd probably go with the Sony cameras as they're a lot lighter and more compact than my Pentax's are, and higher resolution as well. The thing I don't like about them is the lack of infinity focus point on the lenses. If there is a Sony mount for the telescope that let's the camera body attach with no lens then I suppose that point is moot then.

This weekend I did come very close to pulling the trigger on the new K3 II with it's built in astrotracing feature, it was on sale up here for just over C$1000 for the body, but I want to sell my K10D first before I purchase that. The astrotracing looks like it may work well for doing longer exposures of the Milky Way etc.

The reason I was thinking about the smaller ccd cameras was the reasons Andy alluded to, I've got no experience in stacking images but I've seen some very clear & sharp images, particularly of the moon, from smaller sensor "webcam" type cameras where many images are stacked.

I am going to check out adapters for my larger cameras as well, particularly the Sony mirrorless cameras, they are small and light enough they should not affect the telescope as much.
 
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  • #29
Glenstr said:
I have a couple of DSLR's (K10D & K-x ) & compact system camera's (Sony NEX-5N & A5100) that I could use if there are adapters that will fit my telescope.

here ...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004JU5FYS/?tag=pfamazon01-20

and here ...
http://www.ebay.com/bhp/t-ring-sony

are a couple among several others

Glenstr said:
The thing I don't like about them is the lack of infinity focus point on the lenses. If there is a Sony mount for the telescope that let's the camera body attach with no lens then I suppose that point is moot then.

exactly see previous links :wink:

keep in touch with progress :)

EDIT: ... I meant to add, if you do use a camera rather than one of those small ccd imager units
you may need to add a small amount of counter weight to the bottom end of the tube to balance it :)Dave
 
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  • #30
Andy Resnick said:
And a crop from an image acquired about 1 hour later- same lens and camera settings, and this is *after* I verified best focus:

If you did refocus after that initial hour of imaging, I could only imagine that either
1) you dissed the focus point
2) atmospheric changes
3) The lens hadn't dewed over in the cool conditions ??

#3 caught me out one nite ... It shouldn't have I should have known better LOL ... took a little while
for the penny to drop and to figure out why images were blurry
Dave
 
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  • #31
So, the T ring adapter for these are basically M42 adapters, which is the thread the standard size telescope mount adapters have?

Like http://www.ebay.com/itm/T-Ring-for-Sony-NEX-Cameras-Adapter-1-25inches-Telescope-Mount-Tube-/161731598607?

I also see some advertise adapters with Barlow lenses..
 
  • #32
davenn said:
If you did refocus after that initial hour of imaging, I could only imagine that either
1) you dissed the focus point
2) atmospheric changes
3) The lens hadn't dewed over in the cool conditions ??

#3 caught me out one nite ... It shouldn't have I should have known better LOL ... took a little while
for the penny to drop and to figure out why images were blurry

Good ideas, but I ruled (1) and (3) out by inspection- I have a 10x loupe that I occasionally use to accurately focus, and I just looked through the lens for fog/condensation.

I'm now thinking that there were some high thin clouds that moved in- too thin to see by eye, but enough to cause scattering and blur the stars.
 
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Likes davenn
  • #33
Glenstr said:
So, the T ring adapter for these are basically M42 adapters, which is the thread the standard size telescope mount adapters have?

Like http://www.ebay.com/itm/T-Ring-for-Sony-NEX-Cameras-Adapter-1-25inches-Telescope-Mount-Tube-/161731598607?

I also see some advertise adapters with Barlow lenses..
one end of the adaptor has the fitting suitable for your camera body mount, the other end is usually a smooth tube that will slide into the telescope eyepiece holder
instead of the eyepiece. there are 2 standard diameter sizes of eyepieces ... 1.25" and 2". so check your scope ( its most likely 1.25") and get the appropriate
one to suitDave
 

1. What is the Celestron Sky Prodigy 130 telescope?

The Celestron Sky Prodigy 130 is a computerized reflector telescope designed for amateur astronomers. It has a 130mm aperture and a focal length of 650mm, making it suitable for both viewing and astrophotography.

2. How does the Sky Prodigy 130 telescope work?

The Sky Prodigy 130 uses a built-in computerized mount and a database of over 4,000 celestial objects to automatically align itself with the night sky. This allows for easy and accurate tracking of objects, even for beginners.

3. Can I use the Sky Prodigy 130 for astrophotography?

Yes, the Sky Prodigy 130 is designed for both viewing and astrophotography. It comes with a built-in camera mount and a free download of Starry Night software, making it easy to capture stunning images of celestial objects.

4. What is the difference between the Sky Prodigy 130 and other telescopes?

The Sky Prodigy 130 stands out from other telescopes due to its automatic alignment and tracking capabilities. This makes it easier for beginners to use and eliminates the need for manual adjustments, allowing for more time to observe and photograph objects.

5. Is the Sky Prodigy 130 suitable for all levels of astronomy experience?

While the Sky Prodigy 130 is designed for beginners, it can also be used by more experienced astronomers. Its automatic alignment and tracking features make it a convenient and efficient option for all levels of experience.

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