Tea
Storage? I am Storage!
Well, Tannin's red-it cred-it card is finally working for its living. I talked the old bugger into lashing out for a digiscoping setup, and ... about six grand later ... it's taking shape.
The idea is that you use a fairly cheap, plain-jane digital camera to store the images on, but, in order not to get a great big picture of a tree with a tiny little brown dot somewhere that you assure everyone is really a juvenile Pink Robin and not a spec on the lens, you point it through a spotting scope. Err ... let me see if I can find a picture of one to hijack.
You need a good qualty tripod, a really smooth and firm head (tripod heads designed for video work are the best), the biggest, meanest bit of high-tech optics you can lay your hands on - I went for a Swarovski ATS 80 HD - and a diital camera with internal (i.e., non-moving) optical zoom, good low-light performance, and a small lens (because you need an objective lens small enough to fit onto the eyepeice of the telescope).
Hence the Coolpix 4500. The experts tell me that these are far and away the best thing for digiscoping.
The result is that, for about $US3000, you have a rig that can take nice sharp pictures of very small things a very long way away. The theoretical maximum magnification is 60 (scope) * 4 (camera) = 240. In practice, most people seem to get the best results with around 30 to 150X magnification - which is still a hell of a lot! I'll post some pictures of the complete rig when the scope arrives in about a week.
The idea is that you use a fairly cheap, plain-jane digital camera to store the images on, but, in order not to get a great big picture of a tree with a tiny little brown dot somewhere that you assure everyone is really a juvenile Pink Robin and not a spec on the lens, you point it through a spotting scope. Err ... let me see if I can find a picture of one to hijack.
You need a good qualty tripod, a really smooth and firm head (tripod heads designed for video work are the best), the biggest, meanest bit of high-tech optics you can lay your hands on - I went for a Swarovski ATS 80 HD - and a diital camera with internal (i.e., non-moving) optical zoom, good low-light performance, and a small lens (because you need an objective lens small enough to fit onto the eyepeice of the telescope).
Hence the Coolpix 4500. The experts tell me that these are far and away the best thing for digiscoping.
The result is that, for about $US3000, you have a rig that can take nice sharp pictures of very small things a very long way away. The theoretical maximum magnification is 60 (scope) * 4 (camera) = 240. In practice, most people seem to get the best results with around 30 to 150X magnification - which is still a hell of a lot! I'll post some pictures of the complete rig when the scope arrives in about a week.