Andy Joyce
October 28th, 2005, 11:11 PM
My apologies if this is a repeat. I forgot if I posted it already.
I shot this a while ago, and I have newer/better stuff to post when I get a chance.
http://www.geocities.com/amjoyce2004/XL2moonpart1.zip
The zip is ~5MB. Inside is an mpeg1 file.
(Sorry for the extra step. My free Yahoo web site is being picky, so R-click the link and "Save target as...", unzip, and enjoy! The final file is ~20MB, so I actually saved you some download time.)
Components:
Canon XL2 + EF adapter + EOS T-adapter + 1.25" Eyepiece Projection Assembly + 40mm Plossl eyepiece + 12" Newtonian reflector
= the Moon in all its glory...
Check out the grazing of light on the crater rims along the terminator (shadow line).
The "seeing" wasn't so great that night, but you get moments when the Moon isn't "swimming" in atmospheric turbulence. I varied the shutter speed to change contrast since there is no iris in a telescope. I will eventually upload more close-up shots, some planets, and some microsope stuff too.
It's not HD, but lens and adapter choice is a powerful thing. Try the amazing shallow depth-of-field of a spotting scope or small telescope. Sure, it's no cinematic prime lens, but it doesn't cost or weigh as much either.
I shot this a while ago, and I have newer/better stuff to post when I get a chance.
http://www.geocities.com/amjoyce2004/XL2moonpart1.zip
The zip is ~5MB. Inside is an mpeg1 file.
(Sorry for the extra step. My free Yahoo web site is being picky, so R-click the link and "Save target as...", unzip, and enjoy! The final file is ~20MB, so I actually saved you some download time.)
Components:
Canon XL2 + EF adapter + EOS T-adapter + 1.25" Eyepiece Projection Assembly + 40mm Plossl eyepiece + 12" Newtonian reflector
= the Moon in all its glory...
Check out the grazing of light on the crater rims along the terminator (shadow line).
The "seeing" wasn't so great that night, but you get moments when the Moon isn't "swimming" in atmospheric turbulence. I varied the shutter speed to change contrast since there is no iris in a telescope. I will eventually upload more close-up shots, some planets, and some microsope stuff too.
It's not HD, but lens and adapter choice is a powerful thing. Try the amazing shallow depth-of-field of a spotting scope or small telescope. Sure, it's no cinematic prime lens, but it doesn't cost or weigh as much either.