Celestron is the BEST Telescope brand and I would LOVE to get a BIG Celestron Telescope where I can put my phone too, but first I really need to save my money because Telescopes are so expensive, but I like this video is that long and there's a new presenter too thank you High Point Scienfic! 😮❤
That's a great question! Unfortunately, there is not a list of suggested exposure times for different objects. The Origin's default exposure time is 10 seconds, which will work great for most objects. There is an option in the Origin app to customize the camera settings. The maximum exposure time is 30 seconds due to field rotation of the Alt-Az mount. You can also decrease the exposure time to as low as milliseconds (this is useful when imaging the Moon). Our suggestion would be to start off with the default 10-second exposure and watch the progress as the Origin stacks each exposure. If the object looks too dim after some time stacking, then you can try increasing the exposure time (max 30 seconds) and see if that makes a noticeable difference. Also, something to keep in mind, if an object is straight up in the sky and is close to zenith, then you will likely need to use shorter exposures.
Here's a tip in order to experience this, how about Celestron drops the price by half? It's a ripoff for what it is a crappy camera, az mount and crappy software. The only decent thing is the scope which is a lovely piece of kit
Celestron is the BEST Telescope brand and I would LOVE to get a BIG Celestron Telescope where I can put my phone too, but first I really need to save my money because Telescopes are so expensive, but I like this video is that long and there's a new presenter too thank you High Point Scienfic! 😮❤
That was a lot of help, thanks.
Thanks for the video. Do you know if there is a list with suggested exposure times for different types of objects?
If not, what did you prefer?
That's a great question! Unfortunately, there is not a list of suggested exposure times for different objects.
The Origin's default exposure time is 10 seconds, which will work great for most objects. There is an option in the Origin app to customize the camera settings. The maximum exposure time is 30 seconds due to field rotation of the Alt-Az mount. You can also decrease the exposure time to as low as milliseconds (this is useful when imaging the Moon).
Our suggestion would be to start off with the default 10-second exposure and watch the progress as the Origin stacks each exposure. If the object looks too dim after some time stacking, then you can try increasing the exposure time (max 30 seconds) and see if that makes a noticeable difference. Also, something to keep in mind, if an object is straight up in the sky and is close to zenith, then you will likely need to use shorter exposures.
@ thanks, I meant what exposure time in summary e.g 10 minutes for M31 etc
Sorry English is not my mother language
Thanks for explaining all that details 👍
Great vid. Thanks.
Excellent presentation !
i like the no AI photo better
to, to, much just to connect
Here's a tip in order to experience this, how about Celestron drops the price by half? It's a ripoff for what it is a crappy camera, az mount and crappy software. The only decent thing is the scope which is a lovely piece of kit
It's by far the best smart scope.
00:35 ... I personally like "How to Kill a Rat with an Oboe". George C