@AstroBackyard. I have a Canon T3i, but you said something abut the lenses. Will the lenses that came with my camera work. OO this sounds expensive. I can buy the filter if it's affordable and it does not break me. This looks interesting and I want to try this for sure.
@@RazomDoPeremohy In a nut shell, YES! It will work even better with the a Ra or modified camera. Ra's and modified cameras have the normal filter (which blocks some Ha) removed so it allows all visible light to pass - hence the improvement. The Ha filter blocks all of other visible light except Ha which has most of the detail. - Good Luck
Here's why the filter still works fine with un-modified cameras. The stock filter in un-modded cameras does block out some H-Alpha, but it's a broad-band filter. From the data I've seen, it does take out about ~80% of the light at H-alpha, but that still lets through the remaining 20%. Using this narrow-band filter on top will still isolate H-alpha. There's just less of it that gets to the sensor. The difference between using this filter with a modded vs unmodded camera is that you'll be seeing ~100% of the H-alpha with the modded camera, compared to ~20% for the un-modded camera. Basically, you'll just capture more H-alpha photons using this filter + astro mod, compared to this filter without astro-mod. You'll get brighter exposures with less significant noise. If you've got an unmodded camera, you'll just need ~5x more integration time to reach similar H-alpha photon counts to the modded cameras.
So lets say I'm shooting an object at f2.8 ISO 1600 60s tracked. To obtain the same exposure as a modified camera I would need to shoot those same settings for 5 minutes right?
Hi there, nice vids. I have a question, i use the same filter on a modded 1200d canon, however the color dominating is blue, how do you get rid off it? Preprocessing? Thnk you
Do you have to increase exposure time significantly when shooting HA with an unmodified dslr? Do you make special white balance adjustments for shooting HA?
@@Spivster46 pretty much. But you would just be adding the Ha on top of an already well exposed image to boost contrast. It won't be your main source of detail in an image
Just look at the bright side, Spivster46: you CAN increase exposure time up to the limits of acceptable noise. For that reason, btw, I switched to a cooled EOS 700Da by Primalucelab. And well, yes, I'm quite happy about it.
@@klausschneider8529 I just tried my H-Alpha 1.25" last night and yeah a cooled camera would make a difference. i have amp glow like crazy on my non-cooled dslr.
Wait... The Ha clip actually improves astro images even if your camera still has the IR filter inside it? Is it worth investing in? (as a beginner with just a full frame and a telephoto lens)
I'm way down the rabbit hole with filter wheels, dedicated astro cameras, scope, motorized focus etc...and I always feel pangs of jealousy seeing a vid like this where you've really gone back to basics using a DSLR + clip it, and you can quickly adjust FoV by swapping lenses and get a killer widefield shot for a target like this, while I'm stuck cropped in unless I swap to a completely different scope. Keep it up, looks great!
Need advice from a expert. I'm in a bottle 7 would like to get Ilight pollution filter which one would you get? Light pollution sucks here. Would a uhc filter help? I know optlongmakes good filters also.
Happy I found this video. I'm interested in astro and have been wondering if the clip in filter was a stand alone option instead of modifying a sensor. Now I know! Thank you for sharing your knowledge
My 12nm H-Alpha EOS clip in filter has just arrived today. This is my first narrow-band filter, so really looking forward to getting imaging. Thanks for the great tips!
I use a 6nm clip-in filter on my modified DSLR. Much easier to take test shots for frame and focus with no filter, or an L-Pro or CLS filter first, then switch to the Ha filter. great video Trevor.
Hi, To be able to capture Hydrogen Alpha color , We can not just install this filter in to our ordinary camera without Astro Mod , right? Thanks for a very good video.
just bought one. decided that instead of spending 3 to 4 times as much to upgrade from a 6D to an EOS R. I mainly shoot landscape but lots of photographers are starting to use these filters on their modded dslrs for epic winter shots even in bortle 4 skies!
It makes a huge difference. I use an STC Ha and Oiii clip in filter and the results are great. Like Trevor has shown in the past, you can create a colour image with an impressive white balance. Works great for images with Oiii like the veil nebula and dumbbell nebula but also great for every emission nebula I’ve tried. I use a full spectrum Nikon d7200 and D610 with lenses ranging from wide angle to an 8 inch SCT. From the city. Full moon in Montreal and still works great! But those filters are understandably more expensive. But just Ha is great for black and white too! It was also very impressive before I had my cameras modified. Thanks for the videos Trevor
Hi, can you recommend any clip-in filters for Nikon? I'd like to use one on my D7500 and I guess that this is similar enough to your D7200 that the same filters fit. I just can't find filters for Nikon. Seems like there are only such for Canon.
How does Halpha filter help in full-moon conditions if the moonlight, scattered in the atmosphere, also contains a great deal of Halpha (since lunar light is literally a reflected sunlight with huge Halpha part), which lays over the nebula emission? This doesn't make sense. LP from cities - yes, there are mostly narrow Na doublet and Hg lines in it, but Moon?
I know you mentioned that using this filter on an unmodified camera will also work. I mainly shot milky way landscape images. What I am looking for is a filter that will simulate what a astro modified camera will do. Will this filter do that? Thanks
I am considering getting a basic aps sensor mirrorless canon for astrophotography. There does not seem to be any clip in filters available except for Sony. Is this true or am I just looking in the wrong place. Thanks
Shot the North America Nebula with the Rokinon/Samyang 135 in Ha last night from suburban 5/6 skies . Very glad I listened to this advice! Very nice results. (PS. with my stock Canon EOS 250D) Very helpfull videos! Thank you
Hi, I mainly shoot milky way night scapws, but everyone seems to have modded cameras, which draw out reds, should I get a ha or optolong l pro, I have a stock canon 6d
With stock cameras it might be a sort of a workaround around the ir filter blocking a big portion of the ha. This can be used to take long exposures of ha alone and add it to an image to bring it back
Hey man I was wondering what would happen if you use this filter with a wide angle lens and shoot a night landscape image like you would traditionally do with no filter. Would it work?
Im thinking of getting one to try for astro landscapes, like a lone tree in foreground with say barnards loop in h alpha behind it. I heard you need to do really long exposures tho so will have to use a tracker
Thanks Trevor. I own a Canon 6D and have been wondering how the heck I can get more Ha in my images without overexposing everything else with ridiculously long exposures. The added benefit of imaging from the city and full moon is the icing on the cake. Many thanks from a long time subscriber of yours.
Hello, I have a Canon 6D partially defiltered but even with a stack it doesn't bring out the nebulae well. Will I get better results with this filter? I should point out that I don't have an equatorial mount so will I be able to get enough light with a 24mm lens at F1.8 with a 10-15s exposure? Thank you very much 🙂
If you use the H-alpha 12nm clip filter on a canon t3i DSLR camera do you still need to modify the camera for astrophotography or leave it stock and use this filter?
So I just took my T3i to a camera store to get modified for astrophotography. And I also bought a Roknion 135mm . But I noticed your pictures in this video with that set up were black and white. Will I get those beautiful color photos with that camera and lens???
Thanks again.....its always informative.......summer is almost over hear in florida....80% humeidity will give way to clear sky's..it's been sense march...im back to the lerning curve...hope to have images this winter. Clear sky's
I just bought a full spectrum t3 i for Astro. Cant wait to start using it!! Question though, do you have a video about capturing a landscape of say Orion winter circle and adjusting colour to make sure it still contains red but the rest is properly balanced?
Is this this suitable alternative to actually getting a camera ha modified? I have a Sony a7iii and don't want to risk ruining it for everyday use but I do love astrophotography mainly. Oh, and just bought a Zenithstar 61 following your recommendation!
Hello, I'm fairly new to astrophotography and still learning my basics. I have a question. What I learned is that H alpha has the wavelength of 656nm. Then, what does it mean by 6nm filter and 12nm filter? P.S. Your channel is a blessing. Learning new things every day. Keep up the fantastic work.
Hi Trevor just by chance I saw your dslr ha clip in review after unsure what filter to use.I was using the skytech lpromax but wasn't 100% happy with it the ha filter looks like it ticks All the boxes as my canon dslr 600d is astro modified this filter makes complete sense. I have now put my order in for 1 thanks for the great video and I am looking forward to some amazing results.
Good video. Which filter would one use if you are hunting for faint asteroids and comets and you don't care about color namely you just want to find a previously undiscovered minor planet?
I am living next to a big city (+1M population) so the light pollution is not the smallest factor. Would be a Ha filter still more useful than a standard light pollution filter?
It makes a huge difference. I use an STC Ha and Oiii clip in filter and the results are great. Like Trevor has shown in the past, you can create a colour image with an impressive white balance. Works great for images with Oiii like the veil nebula and dumbbell nebula but also great for every emission nebula I’ve tried. I use a full spectrum Nikon d7200 and D610 with lenses ranging from wide angle to an 8 inch SCT. From the city. Full moon in Montreal and still works great! But those filters are understandably more expensive. But just Ha is great for black and white too! It was also very impressive before I had my cameras modified. Thanks for the videos Trevor
Hm... I am not sure about black and white pictures. Some objects/constellations might be still impressive because of their size and form. Though I can't see the enjoyment of a b/w nebulae - like the Helix nebula.
@@spitzhorneuleh-alpha filter is not for everything .It is great for h-alpha nebulae .not for planetary nebula or galaxies. the helix nebula is not a nebula, it s a planetary nebula , clearly not an h-alpha target
Hey I learned something new today, thanks. The Helix was just one example. I guess I still have to find more objects that are worth b/w. Will store this information for later.
Convinced, will get one. One thing I’m not sure I got clearly is - non-modified DSLR and narrowband filter? I get its not as good as with mod dslr, but is it good enough?
I have an Astronomik CLS clip-in filter. The only reason I don't use it as much as I would normally is that clip-ins require that I use mirror lock-up in my Canon 6D. That means there shutter has to be pressed to lock up the mirror before any exposures can be done. Any suggestions on getting around this? Do I need a better system for controlling the shutter remotely? Do you babysit your camera and manually press the shutter release for every exposure? It gets pretty tedious.
Can you use this instead of modifying your Canon T3i by ripping out the thingy in there, thus making it useless for other photography? I only have 1 camera.
I know this video is a bit older, but I hope you see my comment. It's in regards to the lenses you're using and the compositions. For those shots you're using as examples in this video, are they mostly shot with your 135mm? I've shot the Orion Nebula with my 55-250mm at 250mm, on my T2i, but it's still quite small in the frame. My brain isn't understanding how your shots appear as zoomed in as they are, unless you're cropping heavily. In regards to the clip-in filter. After seeing this, it's definitely on my radar! I didn't realize these types of filters were still useful for non-modded DSLRs. Really cool stuff.
Is there an Astronomik HA filter for Nikon D50? This is an old camera that I have been using for wide field astrophotography. Now, I wanted to use it with an 80mm F/5 telescope with LPS filters/HA filters. Any suggestions are welcome
Trevor of course knows this already, but removing the internal filters only gets you so far with H-alpha. You're still only using the red pixels on your camera. I scraped off the CFA from a cheap 350D I picked up for around £30. It is now a true monochrome camera. The H-alpha light is now able to be exposed on every single pixel. The mod was fairly easy to do. If you mess it up, replacement CCD modules on eBay are relatively cheap so you can try again. The only downside is the 350D has no live view and without the internal filters, what is in focus in the viewfinder isn't in focus on the CCD. Getting good focus can be a bit of a pain. I've just ordered a 600D and I'm going to try the same mod on it.
Hi Trevor. I never saw you take photos of the Sun. I heard Ha filter can do some magic on solar photos but I think you would have to use some serious light reducing filter like Baader film on top of your lens/telescope as well. Do you have any experience in that?
Fantastic video Trevor, and your images looked incredible. Would the 12Nm clip-in filter for a full frame canon camera work well with a 20 or 35mm lens when shooting parts of the Milky Way for more landscape type shots, or are these only worth using on deep sky images?
Dang, I was just wondering if I could do this and if it would look good. I wanted to shoot HA on my DSLR and then stack them as a HARGB, but yeah, I'm a little new and was like, I should just get a monochrome camera if I want to do that. Anyway, I'll be picking up one.
i have been trying to use it for milky way photography but have a lot of noise. i have tried all the combinations of iso (up to 25600) and 1-30 second exposures my camera has and still only get a few stars. I do expose to the right for my rgb photos and deep sky is able to stack those photos just fine but it rejects my ha data...any advice friends?
Trevor, did you use any clear glass to replace the missing ir/uv cut filter that you removed from the camera when you modded it? Or did you just take the ir/uv cut filter out and leave the bracket empty in there (aka. Naked sensor mod I presume) ? I have heard that if you don't add a piece of glass there then you will lose the ability to focus on infinity with most of the lenses, so I was just wondering on how you actually did the mod. Thank you in advance! Marius.
What would happen if you put a neutral density solar filter on your telescope and this filter on your DSLR and took pictures of the sun? Would you be able to photograph CME's?
Would this work on full frame/mirrorless cameras? I have a Canon eos rp and looking to start some astrophotography. Love your channel as well, thanks for sharing all these superb videos.
Trevor, what ISO and exposure settings do you recommend for the Ha filter? Mine just came in and I shoot tomorrow. I'll try to improve one of my previous targets, like the Horsehead Nebula. I was thinking ISO 3200 and 5 minute subs, do you agree?
I watch your vids, the ha filter, did you say it isolated hydrogen/oxygen? is so. are there other filters that isolate other chemical compounds. my thought is if that is true, is it possible to change filters while capturing images to enhance the colors for that chemical compound to get true contrast and natural colors in the final image? I do not take any photos yet, but i got the idea from an Astrum vid on how hubble takes pictures then are colored based on chemical compounds?
G'day from Australia mate, been studying your videos and Dylan's as I've just started with astrophotography. I have a question with using a NB filter with a DSLR, if you change the camera mode to black and white when shooting with the filters do you get more data than shooting in color with the filters?
Did you bin the data while shooting and drizzeld it in DSS? Because it looks so clean, normally the red Channel looks extremly "noisy". I know its just because there are only 1/4 of all the pixels in the red channel
I received some info from a member of the astronomy club I belong to and he said that adding this filter to an unmodified camera won't do much good. Anyone have an information on this? Now I'm really confused as to what path to take. Thanks Gerry D.
Nice video and fantastic results, i am in the process of buying an Ha filter for my converted camera, i dont think Astronomic has a clip in for Fuji yet so i will get a regular circular filter. Do you have a good gem tripod head to recommend ? Thanks !
Trevor, have you tried using a clip in UV/IR filter on your modified cameras so you can use them for every day use? I have seen them from Astronomik and STC Optics. What are your thoughts?
That's true Trevor. But still this cannot beat a monochrome cooled camera with narrow band filter. I've recently switched from my DSLR (Canon 1300D) to CMOS cooled camera (ZWO ASI 1600MM) and oh boy what a game changer ! Much much much more detailed images. I have quite good sky in my backyard (about bortle 3) and i can image much fainter stuff with it. Expensive af, but it was all well worth it!
Hello Trevor, let me ask you a question: i already have a full spectrum dslr, what if i use the ha clip filter on that camera? the benefits of that filter can be added at the full spectrum mode? I mean are they compatible or it is not possible using them at the same time? Thanks and keep going...you are doing a huge work on your channel. greetings from Italy and clear skies.
Nice video as always! Still using mine after years of use. Cheers Kurt
@AstroBackyard. I have a Canon T3i, but you said something abut the lenses. Will the lenses that came with my camera work. OO this sounds expensive. I can buy the filter if it's affordable and it does not break me. This looks interesting and I want to try this for sure.
Does this filter make sense in tandem with the EOS Ra? What impact will it have on the already H-alpha sensitive sensor?
@@RazomDoPeremohy In a nut shell, YES! It will work even better with the a Ra or modified camera. Ra's and modified cameras have the normal filter (which blocks some Ha) removed so it allows all visible light to pass - hence the improvement. The Ha filter blocks all of other visible light except Ha which has most of the detail. - Good Luck
Here's why the filter still works fine with un-modified cameras.
The stock filter in un-modded cameras does block out some H-Alpha, but it's a broad-band filter.
From the data I've seen, it does take out about ~80% of the light at H-alpha, but that still lets through the remaining 20%.
Using this narrow-band filter on top will still isolate H-alpha. There's just less of it that gets to the sensor.
The difference between using this filter with a modded vs unmodded camera is that you'll be seeing ~100% of the H-alpha with the modded camera, compared to ~20% for the un-modded camera.
Basically, you'll just capture more H-alpha photons using this filter + astro mod, compared to this filter without astro-mod. You'll get brighter exposures with less significant noise.
If you've got an unmodded camera, you'll just need ~5x more integration time to reach similar H-alpha photon counts to the modded cameras.
So lets say I'm shooting an object at f2.8 ISO 1600 60s tracked. To obtain the same exposure as a modified camera I would need to shoot those same settings for 5 minutes right?
@@stratomagiwhat you say is correct if you use the modded camera with the filter, otherwise the comparison doesn’t make sense
These tutorials are invaluable to learn.
I really wish I found these videos before i got a EQ6R and a 6" Newt.
Hi there, nice vids. I have a question, i use the same filter on a modded 1200d canon, however the color dominating is blue, how do you get rid off it? Preprocessing?
Thnk you
Looks awesome! I see the price for a Sony one is over $300, yall are killing me
Great one, Trevor! I bought one several years ago and haven’t yet used it. THAT is about to change! Very many thanks from Sydney.
3:12 unless you're adapting the lenses anyway, that way there's plenty of space between the lens and the filter, i.e. the mirrorless line from Canon.
Could you please do this kind of videos for Nikon mirrorless cameras? It would be super helpful. Thank you. Keep up the great videos.
Do you have to increase exposure time significantly when shooting HA with an unmodified dslr?
Do you make special white balance adjustments for shooting HA?
yes, only one pixel will be receiving signal out of the 4
I asummed as much. Was also thinking the onboard filter partially blocks out HA too. Would you say it's a 1 to 4 ratio to compensate on exposure?
@@Spivster46 pretty much. But you would just be adding the Ha on top of an already well exposed image to boost contrast. It won't be your main source of detail in an image
Just look at the bright side, Spivster46: you CAN increase exposure time up to the limits of acceptable noise. For that reason, btw, I switched to a cooled EOS 700Da by Primalucelab. And well, yes, I'm quite happy about it.
@@klausschneider8529 I just tried my H-Alpha 1.25" last night and yeah a cooled camera would make a difference. i have amp glow like crazy on my non-cooled dslr.
Wait... The Ha clip actually improves astro images even if your camera still has the IR filter inside it? Is it worth investing in? (as a beginner with just a full frame and a telephoto lens)
I'm way down the rabbit hole with filter wheels, dedicated astro cameras, scope, motorized focus etc...and I always feel pangs of jealousy seeing a vid like this where you've really gone back to basics using a DSLR + clip it, and you can quickly adjust FoV by swapping lenses and get a killer widefield shot for a target like this, while I'm stuck cropped in unless I swap to a completely different scope. Keep it up, looks great!
Super helpful, I just used the filter this morning for the first time, had to dip back into this video for some pointers. Thanks!!
Need advice from a expert. I'm in a bottle 7 would like to get Ilight pollution filter which one would you get? Light pollution sucks here. Would a uhc filter help? I know optlongmakes good filters also.
Happy I found this video. I'm interested in astro and have been wondering if the clip in filter was a stand alone option instead of modifying a sensor. Now I know! Thank you for sharing your knowledge
My 12nm H-Alpha EOS clip in filter has just arrived today. This is my first narrow-band filter, so really looking forward to getting imaging. Thanks for the great tips!
I thought this clip was too specilised. But allowing to shoot during Moon nights makes me reconsider its usefulness !
Do you need make any moderfication to the camera to use the clip in H-Alpha filter. Eg have mirror up etc.
I use a 6nm clip-in filter on my modified DSLR. Much easier to take test shots for frame and focus with no filter, or an L-Pro or CLS filter first, then switch to the Ha filter. great video Trevor.
Hi,
To be able to capture Hydrogen Alpha color , We can not just install this filter in to our ordinary camera without Astro Mod , right?
Thanks for a very good video.
just bought one. decided that instead of spending 3 to 4 times as much to upgrade from a 6D to an EOS R. I mainly shoot landscape but lots of photographers are starting to use these filters on their modded dslrs for epic winter shots even in bortle 4 skies!
Very informative Trevor! Fantastic video 😊
Thanks Trevor. This answered alot of questions I had, being a DSLR astrophotographer.. Specifically, "what should my next purchase be?"
It makes a huge difference. I use an STC Ha and Oiii clip in filter and the results are great. Like Trevor has shown in the past, you can create a colour image with an impressive white balance. Works great for images with Oiii like the veil nebula and dumbbell nebula but also great for every emission nebula I’ve tried. I use a full spectrum Nikon d7200 and D610 with lenses ranging from wide angle to an 8 inch SCT. From the city. Full moon in Montreal and still works great!
But those filters are understandably more expensive. But just Ha is great for black and white too! It was also very impressive before I had my cameras modified.
Thanks for the videos Trevor
Hi, can you recommend any clip-in filters for Nikon? I'd like to use one on my D7500 and I guess that this is similar enough to your D7200 that the same filters fit. I just can't find filters for Nikon. Seems like there are only such for Canon.
Johannes Grimm there is the stc Duo narrowband Filter for Nikon aps c cameras over at cyclopsoptics
@@colorado8809 thank you I'll look into them
I ordered mine directly from STC in Taiwan. Got them a few days later in Montréal. Astro multispectra and duo-narrowband.
@@volleysim I'm considering one of these - can you say if MS is good for widefield milkyway shots? I can't get away from light pollution much!
Should I get this same great Ha effect from my clip-in Skytech Tr-band filter?
How does Halpha filter help in full-moon conditions if the moonlight, scattered in the atmosphere, also contains a great deal of Halpha (since lunar light is literally a reflected sunlight with huge Halpha part), which lays over the nebula emission? This doesn't make sense. LP from cities - yes, there are mostly narrow Na doublet and Hg lines in it, but Moon?
Awesome Trevor, you sold me on shooting narrowband. Can’t wait to try it out on NGC1499. Thanks!
Thanks Trevor for giving us some tips ^^ Clear skies and space out !!
I know you mentioned that using this filter on an unmodified camera will also work. I mainly shot milky way landscape images. What I am looking for is a filter that will simulate what a astro modified camera will do. Will this filter do that? Thanks
I am considering getting a basic aps sensor mirrorless canon for astrophotography. There does not seem to be any clip in filters available except for Sony. Is this true or am I just looking in the wrong place. Thanks
Shot the North America Nebula with the Rokinon/Samyang 135 in Ha last night from suburban 5/6 skies . Very glad I listened to this advice! Very nice results. (PS. with my stock Canon EOS 250D) Very helpfull videos! Thank you
Hi, I mainly shoot milky way night scapws, but everyone seems to have modded cameras, which draw out reds, should I get a ha or optolong l pro, I have a stock canon 6d
With stock cameras it might be a sort of a workaround around the ir filter blocking a big portion of the ha. This can be used to take long exposures of ha alone and add it to an image to bring it back
Hey man I was wondering what would happen if you use this filter with a wide angle lens and shoot a night landscape image like you would traditionally do with no filter. Would it work?
Im thinking of getting one to try for astro landscapes, like a lone tree in foreground with say barnards loop in h alpha behind it. I heard you need to do really long exposures tho so will have to use a tracker
hello did you think a "canon EOS 2000d" is good for photograph with telescope
Can we add the HA frames to the RGB light frames together in 1 stack session ?
Not seeing one of these anywhere for a Nikon. True, just for Canon?
Would a Sony 100-400mm lens be too much focal length for DSO photography, if I shot at 400mm?
I have the same T3i but mine is unmodded. Nice to see that I can still use this filter with my current DLSR especially when paired with my RASA!
Thanks Trevor. I own a Canon 6D and have been wondering how the heck I can get more Ha in my images without overexposing everything else with ridiculously long exposures. The added benefit of imaging from the city and full moon is the icing on the cake. Many thanks from a long time subscriber of yours.
Hello, I have a Canon 6D partially defiltered but even with a stack it doesn't bring out the nebulae well. Will I get better results with this filter? I should point out that I don't have an equatorial mount so will I be able to get enough light with a 24mm lens at F1.8 with a 10-15s exposure? Thank you very much 🙂
Do I need to have the IR filter on my sensor removed to use this effectively?
sounds like to get better pictures, yes remove the ir cut filter. but you will still get decent pics with the ir filter in still.
If you use the H-alpha 12nm clip filter on a canon t3i DSLR camera do you still need to modify the camera for astrophotography or leave it stock and use this filter?
Helpful video. I might mod my new camera after the warranty expires. but for now I might try stacking H-A filtered shots with unfiltered color shots.
By any chance tested Nikon Z lately for these chip filters?
So I just took my T3i to a camera store to get modified for astrophotography. And I also bought a Roknion 135mm . But I noticed your pictures in this video with that set up were black and white. Will I get those beautiful color photos with that camera and lens???
Thanks again.....its always informative.......summer is almost over hear in florida....80% humeidity will give way to clear sky's..it's been sense march...im back to the lerning curve...hope to have images this winter. Clear sky's
I just bought a full spectrum t3 i for Astro. Cant wait to start using it!!
Question though, do you have a video about capturing a landscape of say Orion winter circle and adjusting colour to make sure it still contains red but the rest is properly balanced?
4:48 is discussion regarding modified IR cameras and using this filter.
Hello Trevor!
I like very much your channel. I'm newbie in this and I would like to ask if I can use this filter in my stock Canon 700D?
Cheers.
Is this this suitable alternative to actually getting a camera ha modified? I have a Sony a7iii and don't want to risk ruining it for everyday use but I do love astrophotography mainly. Oh, and just bought a Zenithstar 61 following your recommendation!
Hello, I'm fairly new to astrophotography and still learning my basics. I have a question. What I learned is that H alpha has the wavelength of 656nm. Then, what does it mean by 6nm filter and 12nm filter?
P.S. Your channel is a blessing. Learning new things every day. Keep up the fantastic work.
Thanks for the video, considering buying it now to get into astrophotography
Could you please do this video for fujifilm xt20 camera
Trevor, your video's are pure gold. Keep shooting and sharing this valuable info. I'll bring the popcorn. Hope to meet soon ~ your neighbor
Hello trevor. Nice video out there. Like the work you do.
why do you need IR sensing if the H alpha is at 600nm ?
Hi, Thanks for the video.
QQ,
Do I need to take Flats with Ha Filter? Does it make sense?
Hi Trevor just by chance I saw your dslr ha clip in review after unsure what filter to use.I was using the skytech lpromax but wasn't 100% happy with it the ha filter looks like it ticks All the boxes as my canon dslr 600d is astro modified this filter makes complete sense. I have now put my order in for 1 thanks for the great video and I am looking forward to some amazing results.
Good video. Which filter would one use if you are hunting for faint asteroids and comets and you don't care about color namely you just want to find a previously undiscovered minor planet?
Are there any for mirrowless systems?
Can you get these for Sony or Nikon?
Friend I've got a nikon z6 is there a equivalent filter
What model is this HA filter? And can it fit in a Canon T7?
Hello from Houston just ordered my H A filter. I want that RED PUNCH!! 2 take care!
I am living next to a big city (+1M population) so the light pollution is not the smallest factor.
Would be a Ha filter still more useful than a standard light pollution filter?
oh yes, i live in a city, the h-alpha changed my life. but pictures are black and white only. and you need very long exposures
It makes a huge difference. I use an STC Ha and Oiii clip in filter and the results are great. Like Trevor has shown in the past, you can create a colour image with an impressive white balance. Works great for images with Oiii like the veil nebula and dumbbell nebula but also great for every emission nebula I’ve tried. I use a full spectrum Nikon d7200 and D610 with lenses ranging from wide angle to an 8 inch SCT. From the city. Full moon in Montreal and still works great!
But those filters are understandably more expensive. But just Ha is great for black and white too! It was also very impressive before I had my cameras modified.
Thanks for the videos Trevor
Hm...
I am not sure about black and white pictures. Some objects/constellations might be still impressive because of their size and form. Though I can't see the enjoyment of a b/w nebulae - like the Helix nebula.
@@spitzhorneuleh-alpha filter is not for everything .It is great for h-alpha nebulae .not for planetary nebula or galaxies. the helix nebula is not a nebula, it s a planetary nebula , clearly not an h-alpha target
Hey I learned something new today, thanks.
The Helix was just one example.
I guess I still have to find more objects that are worth b/w. Will store this information for later.
Can this filter be used with a Canon DSLR body that has a mod to remove the IR filter?
Convinced, will get one. One thing I’m not sure I got clearly is - non-modified DSLR and narrowband filter? I get its not as good as with mod dslr, but is it good enough?
I have an Astronomik CLS clip-in filter. The only reason I don't use it as much as I would normally is that clip-ins require that I use mirror lock-up in my Canon 6D. That means there shutter has to be pressed to lock up the mirror before any exposures can be done. Any suggestions on getting around this? Do I need a better system for controlling the shutter remotely? Do you babysit your camera and manually press the shutter release for every exposure? It gets pretty tedious.
Can you use this instead of modifying your Canon T3i by ripping out the thingy in there, thus making it useless for other photography? I only have 1 camera.
I know this video is a bit older, but I hope you see my comment. It's in regards to the lenses you're using and the compositions. For those shots you're using as examples in this video, are they mostly shot with your 135mm? I've shot the Orion Nebula with my 55-250mm at 250mm, on my T2i, but it's still quite small in the frame. My brain isn't understanding how your shots appear as zoomed in as they are, unless you're cropping heavily.
In regards to the clip-in filter. After seeing this, it's definitely on my radar! I didn't realize these types of filters were still useful for non-modded DSLRs. Really cool stuff.
Is there an Astronomik HA filter for Nikon D50? This is an old camera that I have been using for wide field astrophotography. Now, I wanted to use it with an 80mm F/5 telescope with LPS filters/HA filters. Any suggestions are welcome
Nice. Is there something like this for the Sony mirrorless cameras?
Trevor of course knows this already, but removing the internal filters only gets you so far with H-alpha. You're still only using the red pixels on your camera. I scraped off the CFA from a cheap 350D I picked up for around £30. It is now a true monochrome camera. The H-alpha light is now able to be exposed on every single pixel. The mod was fairly easy to do. If you mess it up, replacement CCD modules on eBay are relatively cheap so you can try again. The only downside is the 350D has no live view and without the internal filters, what is in focus in the viewfinder isn't in focus on the CCD. Getting good focus can be a bit of a pain. I've just ordered a 600D and I'm going to try the same mod on it.
Hi Trevor. I never saw you take photos of the Sun. I heard Ha filter can do some magic on solar photos but I think you would have to use some serious light reducing filter like Baader film on top of your lens/telescope as well. Do you have any experience in that?
Is there a version for Nikon?
Is there a version that fits a Fujifilm X series?
Fantastic video Trevor, and your images looked incredible.
Would the 12Nm clip-in filter for a full frame canon camera work well with a 20 or 35mm lens when shooting parts of the Milky Way for more landscape type shots, or are these only worth using on deep sky images?
Dude! Where do you get your music from???
Dang, I was just wondering if I could do this and if it would look good. I wanted to shoot HA on my DSLR and then stack them as a HARGB, but yeah, I'm a little new and was like, I should just get a monochrome camera if I want to do that. Anyway, I'll be picking up one.
If you do not mind, can I know what's the difference between 6nm or 12nm? I'm about to order new one h-alpha.
i have been trying to use it for milky way photography but have a lot of noise. i have tried all the combinations of iso (up to 25600) and 1-30 second exposures my camera has and still only get a few stars. I do expose to the right for my rgb photos and deep sky is able to stack those photos just fine but it rejects my ha data...any advice friends?
Trevor, did you use any clear glass to replace the missing ir/uv cut filter that you removed from the camera when you modded it? Or did you just take the ir/uv cut filter out and leave the bracket empty in there (aka. Naked sensor mod I presume) ? I have heard that if you don't add a piece of glass there then you will lose the ability to focus on infinity with most of the lenses, so I was just wondering on how you actually did the mod. Thank you in advance!
Marius.
What would happen if you put a neutral density solar filter on your telescope and this filter on your
DSLR and took pictures of the sun? Would you be able to photograph CME's?
Would this work on full frame/mirrorless cameras? I have a Canon eos rp and looking to start some astrophotography. Love your channel as well, thanks for sharing all these superb videos.
Do it has nikon apsc clip in fiter H-Aplah
Trevor, what ISO and exposure settings do you recommend for the Ha filter? Mine just came in and I shoot tomorrow. I'll try to improve one of my previous targets, like the Horsehead Nebula. I was thinking ISO 3200 and 5 minute subs, do you agree?
I watch your vids, the ha filter, did you say it isolated hydrogen/oxygen? is so. are there other filters that isolate other chemical compounds. my thought is if that is true, is it possible to change filters while capturing images to enhance the colors for that chemical compound to get true contrast and natural colors in the final image? I do not take any photos yet, but i got the idea from an Astrum vid on how hubble takes pictures then are colored based on chemical compounds?
G'day from Australia mate, been studying your videos and Dylan's as I've just started with astrophotography. I have a question with using a NB filter with a DSLR, if you change the camera mode to black and white when shooting with the filters do you get more data than shooting in color with the filters?
Did you bin the data while shooting and drizzeld it in DSS? Because it looks so clean, normally the red Channel looks extremly "noisy". I know its just because there are only 1/4 of all the pixels in the red channel
Cool video as always. Trevor in this case you use a mod dslr which is non cooled. What is your subexposure duration usual?
Trever I have the EOS RA, can you tell me what clip in filter for my body. I have the EF to RF adapter.
I received some info from a member of the astronomy club I belong to and he said that adding this filter to an unmodified camera won't do much good. Anyone have an information on this? Now I'm really confused as to what path to take. Thanks Gerry D.
Nice video and fantastic results, i am in the process of buying an Ha filter for my converted camera, i dont think Astronomic has a clip in for Fuji yet so i will get a regular circular filter. Do you have a good gem tripod head to recommend ? Thanks !
Your music is always great in videos
Trevor, have you tried using a clip in UV/IR filter on your modified cameras so you can use them for every day use? I have seen them from Astronomik and STC Optics. What are your thoughts?
That's true Trevor. But still this cannot beat a monochrome cooled camera with narrow band filter. I've recently switched from my DSLR (Canon 1300D) to CMOS cooled camera (ZWO ASI 1600MM) and oh boy what a game changer ! Much much much more detailed images. I have quite good sky in my backyard (about bortle 3) and i can image much fainter stuff with it. Expensive af, but it was all well worth it!
can you provide a few list of Nebulas that i can shout with my 70-200isL? thanks
Hello Trevor, let me ask you a question: i already have a full spectrum dslr, what if i use the ha clip filter on that camera?
the benefits of that filter can be added at the full spectrum mode?
I mean are they compatible or it is not possible using them at the same time?
Thanks and keep going...you are doing a huge work on your channel.
greetings from Italy and clear skies.
Great as always 👍🇬🇧
Good overall Ha filter use video Trevor!