snaggs
Member
Has anybody tried this with their 4x5 camera? Any recommendations on film for 4x5 for Astrophotography?
Daniel.
Daniel.
There are quite a few adapters for 4x5 holders to fit microscopes.
Sorry, I didn't mean eye-piece astrophotograpy, I meant piggy back astrophotography. I have a LX90 with EQ wedge and thought I would try some widefield milky way shots.
I'll post some of my results to this thread. Now I've got the 4x5, Rolleiflex and FM3A, it won't be so boring doing long exposures as I'll have three camera's to play with![]()
Hey folks, I wrote the page on the vacuum film holder. I also skulk here on APUG. When everything goes right, a 4x5 transparency of the night sky on the light box is really impressive to see.
I like Kodak E100G for my 4x5 astrophotography. I use my normal lenses and camera riding on top of a telescope mount. The telescope has no optical tube - it's just the mount with a electronic drive to track the stars. I shoot with my large format lenses wide open (f/5.6). Exposures aren't excessive -- for me, about fifteen to thirty minutes will do with 100 speed color transparency films before light pollution/skyglow becomes objectionable. Black and white negative films also work well for astrophotography, and benefit greatly from N+ development (an extra 20% or more to normal development times).
A guidescope helps with some camera formats. I have a small refractor with a crosshair eyepiece mounted next to the camera. I manually guide out any tracking errors of the telescope by noting if the stars 'move' in relation to the crosshairs in the guidescope eyepeice. It's not difficult - just a quick glance every so often to make sure everything's running smoothly.
I've found a guidescope isn't needed with my 35 for anything up to a 200mm lens. Medium format doesn't need it until I hit normal to slight telephoto lens range. For 4x5 it's pretty much a must for all lenses.
---I like Kodak E100G for my 4x5 astrophotography. I use my normal lenses and camera riding on top of a telescope mount. The telescope has no optical tube - it's just the mount with a electronic drive to track the stars. I shoot with my large format lenses wide open (f/5.6). Exposures aren't excessive -- for me, about fifteen to thirty minutes will do with 100 speed color transparency films before light pollution/skyglow becomes objectionable. ---.
There is a difference between aperture, i.e. the area of the lens opening in square mm, and focal ratio (or f-stop) that comes into play in astrophotography. With pinpoint sources such as stars, equal apertures (not equal f-stops), say a 400 mm f:6.3 lens and a 180 mm f:2.8 lens, will record the same number of stars (i.e. to the same magnitude) with equal exposure times. The lens with the faster f-ratio, the 180 f:2.8, will record more extended objects such as nebulae with equal length of exposure.
See Covington, Astrophotography for the Amateur, page 121 e.p, and Reeves, Wide-Field Astrophotograpy, section 4.5. This is not a violation of the laws of physics, it _is_ the law.
Lee
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