Thursday, August 21, 2025
Issue #619: Space Summer Redux + Uncle Rod’s Yearly M13 Part II
Muchachos, down here on the borders of the Great Possum Swamp it sure has been that proverbial long, hot summer. I’ve been able to do some astronomy here and there, but not much, campers, not much. I hope conditions will begin to change as August takes its place in the rearview mirror, but I am not counting on that. In September and October, we here in the ‘Swamp really begin watching the stormy Gulf of Mexico…
SOOO…. No big observing plans or projects till the
thunderboomers at least reduce their intensity and frequency. What, then? I got
out last month and captured my yearly M13 with the SeeStar S50, Suzie. One
reason for using the Smartscope was I wanted to try out her new equatorial
mode. Worked fine. I had no problem doing a polar alignment, and The Suze
tracked amazingly well, dropping nary a frame over the course of a half-hour.
Yep, worked fine, and I thought I was done experimenting with Suzie for now.
Not so. First off, I hadn’t tried longer exposures,
longer subframe exposures, that is. EQ mode makes exposing for longer than 10
seconds more practical, and the SeeStars can now go up to a minute. How would
that work? I also wanted to test the scope’s new 4K feature. I thought
ZWO would rest on their laurels for a while after nailing down EQ mode, but
they didn’t. Just weeks ago, they added the option to have the app upscale
your pix to 4K resolution. What was that all about?
In typical Unk fashion, howsomeever, that is putting the
dadgum cart ahead of the nag. Traditionally, I’ve offered an account of my
birthday doings here, though your routine-loving correspondent’s b-day has been
much the same year after year. In homage to my days as a space-crazy kid when I’d
spend my summers with my head out in the stars, one feature of Unk’s big day is
space modeling. I didn’t do much this year, but as you can see, I did
continue (slowly) with the launch umbilical tower (LUT) for my completed
Airfix Saturn V model. ‘Twas fun, and maybe I’ll pay more attention to my
little sub-hobby e’en as summer wanes away.
Natcherly, on Unk’s birthday evening (last month) he and Miss Dorothy
made our way to my favorite Mexican (well, Tex-Mex) restaurant, El Giro’s.
There, Unk ordered his usual, the Number 13: Chili rellenos, tamale,
burrito. Yes, of course there were many, many cold 807s in the mix
in celebration of your old Uncle’s 72nd trip around Sol.
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Oh, how Unk loves the number 13! |
Anyhoo, there’s no denying it. My 60s were fun and rather
wild in subdued fashion. Hell, back then I thought nothing of yukking it up in
El Giro’s or Heroes till, damn, 10 o’clock at night with me mates! But those days are gone. As they say, “Fun is Fun but Done is Done.” I am feeling fine most
of the time, though.
Yep, I am I feeling good, friends, and we are even making
plans to attend our area’s long-running and—yes—legendary star party, the Deep
South Star Gaze. I am pleased to say it will be back at the Feliciana
Retreat Center this November, which furnishes nice, small motel-type rooms with
air conditioning and showers, just right for an (ulp!) senior like Uncle
Rod. My attendance had dwindled away to practically nothing during the years
the star party was at a different and more spartan facility, but I hope to be
back now and keep on being back for as long as I can be.
“Blah-blah-blah. What else happened on your birthday, Unk?”
Skeeter, that was about it. I missed out on my other traditional birthday
activity this year, activating a park for Parks on the Air. I was all set to head for Gulf Shores State Park. Batteries
were charged and my little G90 transceiver was all checked out. But it was just
too blamed hot. Even with them Gulf breezes, even under shade trees. Ah well,
just like serious observing, serious POTAing will wait for cooler WX.
I set Suze up in the backyard on the Manfrotto tripod and
waited for darkness late on a sultry Tuesday afternoon. The weather station
display in the radio shack said, “Feels Like 102.7,” and the sky was festooned
with clouds. I was doubtful, but the weather services, including the usually
dependable Astrospheric, agreed it was gonna
clear by dark. Even if it did, Astrospheric also predicted sky transparency
would be just this side of skim milk.
That done, I retired to the couch in the cool den with the
felines and sent Suzie to the Great Globular, instructing her to take 20 second
exposures of M13 till I told her to stop. While she was doing her thing, the
cats and I amused ourselves by watching YouTube videos. Tommy, Chaos Manor
South’s resident black cat, favors programs about the war in the Pacific, especially
Midway, and—even moreso— “The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot.” That is just
what we watched until Tommy fell asleep and began snoring heavily as 9pm came in.
I did have to keep an eye on Suzie early on. I’d set her up
for, yeah, 20-second subframes, but we weren’t having much success. Less than 50%
of ‘em were keepers. After 20 minutes or so, we had maybe 7 minutes worth. The
reason was, I thought, twofold: poor conditions and a less than good polar
alignment. When I’d done the alignment, I’d been sweating in the high humidity,
and was already weary (Unk ain’t quite recovered from the Huntsville Hamfest).
I just got the numbers in the green and called it “good enough.”
I know I need to do better and have a SkyWatcher EQ wedge on
the way. The Manfrotto is a very good tripod, and very steady indeed, but there
is no way to adjust the scope’s tilt with any precision. I was a little disappointed,
but there weren’t nothing for it… I backed off to 10-second subframes, let Suze
run for just under an hour, and called it a night. A look at the clock showed
we were coming up on ten freaking thirty, quite the late one for Unk in these
latter days.
The next morning, I imported my M13s into the PC out in the
Batcave (my radio shack/workshop of the telescopes) and had a look at them on a
large monitor. How were they? OK. Not bad, anyway. Well, nothing
to write home about, friends. The high humidity and scattered light pollution
made for blotchy, off-color backgrounds. I had to do something I rarely worry
about with SeeStar images: I ran the pix through Graxpert to make them
look at least presentable.
Hows about the 4K business? Wasn’t much to say about it. On the live screen before beginning my
exposures, I’d touched the three-dot menu and turned on 4K. Or thought I
had. By the light of day, it appeared my finished images were the same resolution
as always. I wasn’t sure what I had done wrong, and the instructions from ZWO are
on the vague side, “Turn on 4K before framing.” I assumed (you know what
they say about that word) they meant “before beginning a capture sequence.” I thought
that was what I’d done but wasn’t sure. I had noted that the switch
turned red when I turned it on.
Oh, well. It looked like the next evening’s skies would
again be passable if not great. In fact, it ‘peared Wednesday might be a smidge
clearer in advance of—yep—another storm front. So, Unk resolved to give the 4K
stuff another try. I set The Suze up in the back forty again, and when it was
dark enough (not till around 8:45, damn this DST) again polar aligned her.
Night 2, 10-second subframes... |
I was more concerned about the 4K feature than getting
20-second sub-frames, so I set the scope for 10-second subs, letting them run
for half an hour. That done, I tried 20-second ones again. This time Suze only
rejected a single frame over the course of half an hour. Whether that was due
to my better polar alignment, better conditions, or a combination of the two, I
do not know.
Next mornin’, I again dumped the pictures to the PC and
wound up scratching my head. Yes, they were twice the normal 1080x1920
resolution, just as they should have been after upscaling. But when I brought
up the previous night’s photos, so were they, 2160x3840. What the—?
I can only presume I got on the wrong directory when I was checking the shots the
previous morning. I didn’t pay much attention to the dates on the images and,
well, one M13 with the same scope is pretty much like any other. At any rate, the
4K feature does work and does seem to make the images look smoother and just better.
It ain’t like night and day, but I do see a difference. Yes, I know, “TANSTAAFL”
applies. Upscaling introduces noise, but I couldn’t see that it was any worse
in my upscaled frames.
And that was that. 4K works, and longer subframe
exposures are practical now when called for. Were they in my case? Not really. In
suburban light pollution, 10-second subs will often be more practical if you
ain’t up to doing a lot of processing, which your ignernt old Uncle don’t know
how to do anyway. In the wintertime or from a darker site, I suspect it will be
a far different story.
On the Chaos Manor South horizon? The SkyWatcher EQ wedge will be here on Saturday, and I will report on my results with it in the next article rat-cheer. What will that be about other than the wedge? I’d like to say it will concern my big (sort of), new (sort of) observing project. As above, though, I ain’t convinced September will bring better skies to Possum Swamp. We shall see, muchachos, we shall see…