@Zox122 The color is indeed dark red and making out contrast is a bit tougher with the bare eye but once you are used to, it's doing a lot more for you than these videos could. It's pretty amazing. And i only take the double stack off the scope when i want to get better contrast on the prominences on the edge of the limb. Those come out better with less filtering... also the sunspots appear like little black specks without the second stack. The double stack reveals a lot and i wouldnt miss it.
@Zox122 oh and the color is achieved by turning my cam to black&white modus and putting a sepia filter over it. looked more attractive than just b&w ;)
Great video:) What is Sun colour through eyepiece? If it's dark red like in
other video I assume there is less contrast on surface detail and
prominences, so how did you get yellowish colour in one occasion in video?
Hope you enjoy your scope:) Is it a big difference between single stack and
double stack ? Clear skies!
Zox122 1 year ago
@Zox122 The color is indeed dark red and making out contrast is a bit tougher with the bare eye but once you are used to, it's doing a lot more for you than these videos could. It's pretty amazing. And i only take the double stack off the scope when i want to get better contrast on the prominences on the edge of the limb. Those come out better with less filtering... also the sunspots appear like little black specks without the second stack. The double stack reveals a lot and i wouldnt miss it.
longipes 1 year ago
@Zox122 oh and the color is achieved by turning my cam to black&white modus and putting a sepia filter over it. looked more attractive than just b&w ;)
longipes 1 year ago
Cool!
I have the LS50F B600,and a DMK41 camera.
your views of the sunspots trough a LS60T are breathtaking!!
I'm thinking about buy a double stack LS50F filter.
alfargan 1 year ago