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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Prescriptive astrophotgraphy,
By
This review is from: Deep-Sky Video Astronomy (Patrick Moore's Practical Astronomy Series) (Paperback)
Massey and Quirk's (M&Q) latest book is largely a prescriptive guide to operating a monochrome frame-accumulation video camera with a telescope. It tells the user what to do and when to do it. It describes the GSTAR-EX camera sold by Massey, and the well-known Registax program, and spends a lot of time in describing the steps the operator must go through to get results from the astrophoto session.
M&Q spend most time on the GSTAR-EX camera sold by Massey, with only occasional mention of other competing products (StellaCam, Mintron, Watec, Imaging Source) and no mention at all of the Mallincam Hyper. This is not a criticism; if you use one of these other devices you will still find the book useful. Careful reading is needed to tease out equipment configuration which will work with a given telescope. This is one area where M&Q could have spent more time, as it represents the greatest cost to the isolated amateur trying to get things right. The writers are also exclusively PC-centric, but if you use Macs you may still find the broad steps applicable to the software you do use. The gallery at the end of the book is spellbinding, and shows M&Q's consummate abilities at the telescope. Enviable indeed. The section on "photographs from light polluted skies" gives some idea of what can be achieved with the GSTAR from suburbia using moderate telescopes (8 - 10" Newtonians and SCTs, 4" ED refractors, etc). My verdict - the book is a worthwhile addition to the amateur's library. It will not provide as much background theory as the amateur might wish for, but in its stated aim of introducing the amateur astronomer to video astronomy, it does a very good job. Disclaimer:- the author does not have a GSTAR-EX nor is affiliated with M&Q.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More of a software guide,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Deep-Sky Video Astronomy (Patrick Moore's Practical Astronomy Series) (Paperback)
The other reviewer hits the nail on the head. With only about 13 pages devoted to describing the various video cameras available this book leaves you with more questions than answers about camera selection. I tracked down websites for the various cameras mentioned and I was unable to make a sensible comparison of their features. The cameras mentioned range from $275 to $800 and they clearly feel this is the best bang-for-the-buck. There is a passing mention of webcams, but little more. There is no mention at all of Celestron's Celestron NexImage Solar System Imager.
That said, the bulk of the book is an in-depth step-by-step guide to manipulating the raw video you have captured and explains how to get the best possible images. The book is also filled with great photos, each listed with the telescope specs listed, but not always the camera model. There's also a nice little section on using a video camera for guiding. If I ever buy a video camera this book will be invaluable; but I'll have to find another source of information to guide my camera selection. |
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Deep-Sky Video Astronomy (Patrick Moore's Practical Astronomy Series) by Steve Massey (Paperback - March 11, 2009)
$34.95 $24.87
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