Nice photo, Jared! Thanks, Joe (PS, are you a member of SLAS? If so you could put it in the club's on-line gallery, in your own section._ ________________________________ From: Jared Smith <jared@smithplanet.com> To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Saturday, September 3, 2011 7:40 PM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Need solar filter material On Sat, Sep 3, 2011 at 3:09 PM, Chrismo <djchrismo@gmail.com> wrote:
Just curious, since I don't know much about this end of things... would this film be "as good" as more expensive glass filters?
I think the Baader film is just as good as the glass filters, so long as you are looking for a standard ND filter. And it's much less expensive. I've always purchased mine at http://astrozap.com/scripts/prodList.asp?idCategory=31 and made home-made filter cells precisely as Rodger described. A few lessons learned: - The photographic filter (ND=3.8) is NOT safe for visual observing, even with eyepiece filters - not just because it's quite bright, but because it lets through way too much UV. I learned this the hard way - thankfully my eyes weren't permanently damaged. - For larger scopes (maybe > 6"), use either the visual filter material (ND=5) or use a smaller, off-set photographic filter. I did a full aperture photographic filter on my 8" Newtonian and even at 1/4000th second at ISO100, my exposure are slightly overexposed. Here's a photo I took some months back - http://smithplanet.com/astro/solarsystem/solar/5-2011/final.jpg Note that this is false coloring. Jared _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://www.slas.us/gallery2/main.php