"Santa" was so kind as to bring me a new camera. So, bye, bye to the   Canon A530 and welcome EOS 1000D. 
The time has gone while waiting for   decent weather for testing the new toy and trying to familiarize myself   with it. I did some testing indoors out through the window and noticed  that the stock focuser does not work with the camera + adapter setup.  The focus does not move enough inward. So some "small" changes needed to  be done before going outside. The focuser and focuser tube were  shortened in order to get the focus to infinity with the camera.
Finally on January 30 2011 the weather took a turn for better, well,   enough to take the equiment out and do some quick testing. My intention   was to test the camera mounting and see how things might go on a  proper  night of photography.
I chose M42 (The Orion Nebula) as my first target (surprise,  surprise). The target was not located in the best possible direction  from my observation site, it was just above the roof of the house. The  good thing is that the roof is covered in snow, so there weren't any  major updrafts of warm air. However the streetlights behind the house  did manifest themselves in the longer exposures. I set up the rig and  did a quick polar alignment, no drift alignment this time, because the  temperature was dropping rapidly and I was oput only for a quick test.
First I took a few pictures with the camera optics only.  The  following image was taken at 55mm focal length, ISO400, 30s exposure,  f/4,9.
 The image is a cropped jpeg saved by the camera. No processing has  been done on it. The Orion Nebula is already in this shot showing some  nebulosity and color (i was a little surprised by this). The glow of the  streetlamps behind the house can be seen coloring the bottom right  corner yellowish extending almost to the top left corner. Also the  tracking is not spot on, but sufficient for the tests I intended.
For the next images I installed the camera on the telescope. Focusing  was done by taking short 2-5s exposures and adjusting in between. The  focus is not as good as it could have been, but again enough for this  session. I tried different ISO speeds and exposure times.
The next image is taken at ISO1600, 5s exposure. The graininess due  to the high ISO -speed is clearly evident even though the exposure time  is not that long. Also the shape and colors are quite distinct.
In the last image an exposuretime of 15s was used with ISO1600.  The  background glow is getting quite obvious and distracting. The image is  losing contrast and of course the tracking error is also having its toll  on the image. There is however a noticeable difference in the contrast  between the different areas of the nebula.
All things considered, I consider the test successful. I managed to  get my first images of a deepsky object with just a quick setup. Of  course without guiding I need to pay a lot of attention on the tracking  and polar alignment of the scope. Due to the lack of guiding I need to  also keep the exposure times short, that means more processing later and  larger stacks of images.
While I'm writing this the sky is clearing up again, so maybe I get another session going today.
 



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