Learning to Use My Mavica


Day One

Yesterday, I bought a Sony Mavica MVC-FD7 digital camera. Today, I took a bunch of boring real estate pictures. This evening, I held it up to the eyepiece of my Pronto and got this:
my first moon image
(Well, OK, I hacked on it for a few minutes with Photoshop, but I figure that's fair for digital images :-)

Day Two

Much lower cost/benefit ratio today. I spent several hours playing around with various combinations of tripod setups using one tripod for the Pronto and another to hold the Mavica above the eyepiece. The following two images (selected from about a dozen) are a little better than yesterday's 5 minute effort, but not much :-(

What I've learned so far:

Maybe more light will help so the next thing is to try with the LX200.

OTOH, it is amazing that this works at all. You can't really expect this to stand up to an ST-7!

Day Three

Today I tried the Sun. I found it very difficult to keep the camera aligned. Not sure what's going on. Yesterday's Moon images were much easier. Perhaps the Sun's much brightness is making it all the more difficult for the auto-exposure "algorithm". The following image shows a nice sunspot (I say "nice" because of what I saw in the eyepiece, not this image :-(

And this one was taken with a glass solar filter simply held in front of the Mavica's lens:

Nice effect, but not very accurate :-)

I tried the Moon this evening with my LX200. As expected higher magnification was possible. But as I was hand-holding and in Field mode, the results are still not what I would expect is possible:
Clavius

arzachel

Further experimentation will have to be suspended for a while until we return from the eclipse in Aruba. Meanwhile, it remember this is really a snapshot camera. Here is a better example of what it is intended for:
nowires
(to be fair, Photoshop gets a lot of the credit on this one; click it for the original.)

Day Three

Today just a couple of quick snapshots of my friends Dave and Akkana:
dave

akkaan

Total Solar Eclipse Shots

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Bill Arnett; last updated: 1998 Mar 1