Took 12 x 10sec 30 min ago. Stacked using DSS with 6 darks. Focused using liveview. Canon 450 through vixen 80ed on sphinx, unguided, no drift alignment done (too lazy).


Although the digital way is slower, but can be quite useful if seeing is bad (the star "jump" all over the field in reticle eyepiece at high magnification). Just expose the star for the require exposure time with tracking on, then switch off the tracking for a few seconds which will cause the star to leave behind a star trail from east to west at the end of the drifting star. The direction of the brighter star trail before the tracking is off will indicate whether the star drift to north or drift to south and you can make the approximate correction.If you don't have illuminated recticle to do the drift alignment, you can try doing it the digital way. This is easy to do since your camera has live view feature. First align your camera orientation so that north is up and east is right. See where the star drift to and make the necessary adjustment. If you don't see any drift after one minute duration, then you can start imaging.
Yap... more sub frames give better signal-to-noise ratio, but eat up your hard disk fast... a single colour image will take up 70MB for Canon 450D during processing!Start with 30 frames at least. 60 would be good.
Does 30 seconds gap produce significantly less noise?? I usually don't wait for so long... may be only 10 second for the DSLR to save the image because we usually don't have long period of clear sky... especially this year... still didn't manage to image any DSO this year.Between exposure allow 30 seconds for the camera to cool down.
You connect to the flip mirror using the T-thread on the flip mirror, right?? If so, you need to rotate the whole flip mirror assembly. Also, IMHO, the live view isn't that effective for drift alignment because the live view zoom is not 100% which mean small drift error might still show up on the image even you didn't see it on live view.1) Drift alignment using live view - I suppose I can switch on the grid function to do this. Do I rotate from the eyepiece holder part of the flip mirror assembly to achieve this? Not from the T-ring right?
Use the DSLR histogram to determine how long can you expose. As long as there there is some gap at the right edge of the histogram, it should be ok. All my past DSO RAW image (1 to 2 minutes exposure) from my past F5 scope look over expose by light pollution, but it's still very decent after the processing. You can also use light pollution filter to reduce the light pollution, but you might need to over expose longer due to some light lost cause by the filter.2) Long exposure in light polluted areas - If I do a longer exposure, like 30 secs the whole sky brightens up. Do I do a few shots to determine a suitable exposure time to use? How to choose?
Use an extender (expensive method) or a barlow (low cost method) to increase the focal length, but the drift alignment become more critical at longer focal length.Imaging small DSOs - I have 2 refractors of 700mm and 800mm focal length. What do I do if I want to zoom in on small DSOs like m15 or m57 or clown nebula?
note that if you were to increase your FL your scope, the Focal ratio of ur scope increases too. you might end up with a F ratio too slow for any use other den visual. and as for very small and dim dso in singapore.. i would suggest. you stay away from them first. Bigger stuff would be more rewarding like the M8 and M42 for a start. and at that kind of FL, guiding the mount is a must. else u'll just end up with interesting looking lines for any exposure past 1 min.Use an extender (expensive method) or a barlow (low cost method) to increase the focal length, but the drift alignment become more critical at longer focal length.