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Gordon Thomson is delighted to be a sponsor of Dalgety Bay Astronomy Club.
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NightHawk

Joined: 05 Dec 2006 Posts: 37 Location: Dalgety Bay
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Posted: Dec 28 23:11 Post subject: My first moon picture using a webcam |
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Quite a cloudy night this evening, but it turned out ok. On a 25mm. I couldn't get the camera very close to the lense with the fear of scratching it.
On a 9mm. It was too bright. Like a flashlight on camera.
Hopefully I will be able to get better photos in the future. When the nights are darker, clearer and I have perfected the webcam settings.
Are these too small to use Registax?
I know it isn't the biggest telescope in the world, the Meade 60mm. But do you think I will get an ok picture of Saturn?
Thanks
Neil
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bhenderson50
Joined: 11 Dec 2006 Posts: 49 Location: dalgety bay
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Posted: Dec 29 00:20 Post subject: |
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Hi Neil,
welcome to the fascinating world of astroimaging. I bet you were really excited to get your first images!
Couple of points about your post :-
1. if I understood your post correctly, you took the images with the webcam lens inplace. This is very difficult to do successfully. What you need to do is to unscrew the webcam lens, and replace it with an
adaptor [these can be bought from Astroengineering, via the Telescopehouse website] which will allow the webcam to be inserted into the 1.25" eyepiece holder of the telescope. What you are effectively
doing is to replace the short [around 10mm] focal length webcam lens with the much longer focal length telescope objective, giving higher magnification. The adaptor allows you to rigidly hold the webcam wrt
the objective, and to accurately focus the objective on the webcam ccd element. I can lend you an adaptor to try this out if you would like.
2. I am not sure if the images you posted are single webcam "photos". If so, what you should be doing is to take advantage of the very high speed frame rate capability of the webcam to acquire around 1000
frames [say 100s at 10fps] of video, then use Registax to select the best of those frames, align and stack them to give a nice bright single image. Of course, the length of time you can acquire video over
depends on how well aligned your telescope is! If you would like some help with this, feel free to call me or e-mail me.
3. yes you should be able to take images of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars etc. The moon is a great training ground!
Have a great time learning this new skill,
Bob _________________ bobh |
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Solar B
Joined: 07 Dec 2006 Posts: 115 Location: Dalgety Bay
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Posted: Dec 29 22:17 Post subject: |
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NEIL
your top image is amazing for your first go and without the ease of the adaptor that bob has already discribed . brian _________________ " Gentlemen only ever use Refractors " |
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NightHawk

Joined: 05 Dec 2006 Posts: 37 Location: Dalgety Bay
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Posted: Dec 29 23:49 Post subject: |
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| Quote: | | welcome to the fascinating world of astroimaging. I bet you were really excited to get your first images! |
Indeed it was! I was running round like a headless chicken trying to get a better photo before the clouds set in. The light pollution is dreadful unfortunately in my area as street lamps illuminate most of ground surrounding my house.
| Quote: | | 1. if I understood your post correctly, you took the images with the webcam lens inplace. This is very difficult to do successfully. |
Yes, I put the webcam with the webcam lense in place, up to the eyepiece. I managed to get a small front part of the camera off this evening. I wanted to see it up close. The lense looks tiny, ~2mm. I don't think I will be able to get it off without breaking it.
| Quote: | | 1. if I understood your post correctly, you took the images with the webcam lens inplace. This is very difficult to do successfully. What you need to do is to unscrew the webcam lens, and replace it with an adaptor [these can be bought from Astroengineering, via the Telescopehouse website] which will allow the webcam to be inserted into the 1.25" eyepiece holder of the telescope. What you are effectively doing is to replace the short [around 10mm] focal length webcam lens with the much longer focal length telescope objective, giving higher magnification. The adaptor allows you to rigidly hold the webcam wrt the objective, and to accurately focus the objective on the webcam ccd element. I can lend you an adaptor to try this out if you would like. |
Thanks, I'm using Virtual Dub Mpeg-2 edition to record video from the webcam @ rawest format, 24/32bit colour, 640x480 at supposedly 30fps. Then frame by frame view the video back to choose frames. Even though it is fluent, I don't believe it is achieving this over a the USB 1.1 based device(30fps). But seems ok so far. Would you be able to recommend a make and model of an adapter? Exciting thought, that I would be able to get a higher magnification.
The telescope box mentions, 233X magnification. Would this be the magnification compared to the naked eye? (Suppose, quite a newbie question!)
| Quote: | | 3. yes you should be able to take images of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars etc. |
I'm rather concerned about getting a picture of Saturn at least, since stars are just wobbly specks in my telescope. Any looking at the sky where Saturn should roughly be, it doesn't stand out to me. I have never seen Jupiter through a telescope myself. Bob, very good high quality photo you have taken.
I should be able to configure the telescope with the GOTO system when the night is clearer(I need to a line 2 stars I believe) and Saturn is in the telescopes database, so it should guide me there ok.
| Quote: | | your top image is amazing for your first go and without the ease of the adaptor that bob has already discribed . brian |
Thanks for the compliment!
Update: The telescope has a fault. The knob to make fine adjustments to the horizontal position of the telescope is broken. Spins freely and the on board computer gets very confused indeed. I have a courier coming Tuesday to pick it up. My luck is wavy recently! |
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pbholmes

Joined: 15 Nov 2006 Posts: 150 Location: Dalgety Bay
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Posted: Dec 30 20:41 Post subject: Webcam photography |
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Nice pics Neil.
I too have been planning to have a go at webcam photography, but I haven't quite got there yet.
| bhenderson50 wrote: |
I can lend you an adaptor to try this out if you would like.
Bob |
If no-one else has it just now, I'd quite like to borrow that for a couple of days myself.
Paul. |
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bhenderson50
Joined: 11 Dec 2006 Posts: 49 Location: dalgety bay
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Posted: Dec 31 17:07 Post subject: |
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Hi Neil,
I think the best thing to do would be to let me have a look at your webcam. You could either bring it to me at home, or if you prefer, bring it along to the next meeting at the Bay Inn. All of the webcams I have seen have a removeable lens, which would allow you to fit the adaptor I mentioned. Until I see your webcam, I can't recommend which adaptor would be suitable, but we could certainly try mine first.
Your video settings for the webcam are fine, although I would recommend running at 10fps max - this is because at high frame rates a compression algorithn comes in to play, which can lose you some of the fine detail. 10fps will overcome this limitation. When you say you view the video frame by frame, how are you doing this? If you are manually reviewing the frames you will take a long time to process even a shortish video session. Registax will automatically review the frames for you very quickly, governed by quality limits you set up at the start, then will align and stack the selected frames for you. It's a great piece of freeware!
Take the quoted x233 magnification with a huge dose of salt! The generally accepted limitation for any telescope is about 60x the size of the objective in inches [spot the American influence!], which for your 60mm telescope would give an absolute maximum of around x140. This would be for ideal viewing conditions, which will almost never happen. x50-60 is the mag range you will most often use, and probably around x100 is the highest mag you will be able to use.
What this actually means is that the object you are viewing is brought 100 times closer to you.
Finding Saturn, which is starting to become interesting in the eastern sky later in the evening, can take a bit of practice, but trust me it is worth the effort. Nothing quite beats the "wow" factor of your first live view of Saturn. _________________ bobh |
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bhenderson50
Joined: 11 Dec 2006 Posts: 49 Location: dalgety bay
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Posted: Dec 31 17:09 Post subject: |
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Hi Paul,
I would be happy to let you try out my webcam adaptor. You could either bring your webcam up to me at home, or bring it along to the next meeting. Whichever suits you best.
Bob _________________ bobh |
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pbholmes

Joined: 15 Nov 2006 Posts: 150 Location: Dalgety Bay
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Posted: Dec 31 17:52 Post subject: Webcam adapter |
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Hi Bob,
Thanks for letting me try out the adapter.
Would it be OK if I bring my OTA as well as the webcam, as I would like to see how they fit together.
Is it a prime focus or eyepiece projection arrangement? (Reading it back, this question makes it sound like I know more than I do. I've read up on it, but never actually tried it.)
I'll contact you by Private Message to arrange when.
Paul. |
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bhenderson50
Joined: 11 Dec 2006 Posts: 49 Location: dalgety bay
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Posted: Dec 31 18:27 Post subject: |
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Hi Paul,
the adaptor in question screws in to the front of the webcam, in place of the lens. The adaptor then allows you to insert the webcam in to the telescope 1.25" eyepiece holder, which allows the eyepiece focus adjustment to set the ccd element in the focal plane of the objective. Easy!!
cheers and Happy New year,
Bob _________________ bobh |
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NightHawk

Joined: 05 Dec 2006 Posts: 37 Location: Dalgety Bay
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Posted: Jan 01 03:42 Post subject: |
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| Quote: | | the adaptor in question screws in to the front of the webcam, in place of the lens. The adaptor then allows you to insert the webcam in to the telescope 1.25" eyepiece holder |
From what I seen of your camera (The very popular Philips Toucam Webcam for astronomy). The lense is easily removed from your camera by unscrewing it.
http://images.google.co.uk/images...ent=firefox-a&sa=N&tab=wi
It looks like quite a specialized adapter for your particular webcam technology? Is this correct? Hit me if I'm wrong!
Edit: I apologise for not replying to yout post yet Bob. I must of missed it for some strange reason. WIll reply soon. Possibly the time of 3:45am, is playing sleepy tricks on me. |
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