StudentOfLight said:Thanks again for the feedback. I'll definitely implement the highlight retention processing going forward.
Side-note: On this occasion humidity was about 72% as well so not very good seeing conditions.
I'm still unfortunately without a tracking mount so there is still a tiny bit of trailing in my stars. So perhaps you guys can offer some advice. I think these are my requirements:
0) I'm looking to spend $800-1600 on a mount + drive system
1) I'm currently using the 6D, but will likely get an 80D (or 7D-III) in the future
2) I'm most interested in shooting objects with lenses in the 70-400mm focal length range
3) I value portability as I'd want to drive to a remote location and hike still further away from roads
4) I might get a telescope at a later stage so focal length could become a bit longer
5) I'd be happy with getting reasonably accurate tracking for 2-3 minute sub-exposures (Is that a realistic expectation given my price range?)
Ideally I'd want to walk into a brick-and-mortar shop, see the products first-hand, and speak in-person to an expert, but I don't think there are many shops like this anymore, not where I live at least.
First you should be aware of your image scale. 400mm on a 6D is about 3.3arc seconds per pixel, if your mount is thrashing by 60 arc seconds peak to peak due to drive imperfections then you'ld need to autoguide that out or reduce focal length. The most major of these imperfections is called Periodic Error (PE).
Assuming 60 arc seconds peak to peak periodic error (not at all uncommon in more affordable mounts), up to 20mm focal length will not need guiding regardless of shot length. If your PE period is say 4 minutes (time), then you could go to 40mm with roughly 1 minute shots as you won't suffer the whole magnitude of the PE just a portion so it shoudn't show. You could go to 80mm with 30 second shots and so on. A 30 arc second PE would double all the focal lengths without needing to guide.
If you end up adding guiding (second scope/lens or off-axis guider and a guide camera) + laptop to control the whole thing and to tether the camera, then the lower the periodic error the less there is to have to correct and the less overall error you'll get in your images. Remember a guide setup will only correct for errors THAT HAVE ALREADY OCCURRED and so are in your final exposure.
When it comes to mounts you want:
A: solid (so it doesn't flex at the first breath of wind) = expensive
B: accurate tracking. (so the stars stay in position) = expensive
Clearly something that's too heavy to lift is no good as a portable mount, but I don't think you're in that price range.
Here is a list of many available mounts all tested for periodic error. Some mounts allow you to correct for the average periodic error of the mount, but that still leaves a significant random element, and again the lower the uncorrected PE the better the final result.
http://lambermont.dyndns.org/astro/pe.html
Don't spend cash on a better camera for the sake of astrophotography at this stage, spend it on a mount and then in time, on a guiding setup. If you want a new camera for other reasons, by all means buy another camera.
AFTER that you might concider a dedicated cooled astro CCD or an IR modified DSLR.
Most shops are very thinly spread, but the vast majority will be only too willing to help and a few phone calls will help to put you on the right track, but do phone around. I will also point you at places like http://www.cloudynights.com and http://www.stargazerslounge.com Both generally good sites with many helpful posters, the second is mainly UK based.
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