Hi Marty,marty1776 wrote:Here's another question, I was shooting the ring nebula one night and trying different ISO and shutter speeds(aperture the same as I didn't know how to use it yet). I was just trying to see what looked the best once I downloaded them. If you are shooting something, do you always use the same settings? Or do you try a few, find the one you like for that night and shoot a lot at those settings?
thanks
Lots of great answers here already (thanks guys! )
It appears that ISO 400 is (for a lot of technical reasons) the most optimal setting for most DSLRs (can point you to an article if interested).
The thing is that at higher ISOs, the camera simply starts 'multiplying' the signal; e.g. it simply starts to count 2, 4, 8, etc. changes in brightness level for one photon collected; the image simply over exposes quicker.
At around ISO 400, the camera really counts 1 brightness level for each photon collected.
SInce post-processing lets you multiply photon counts at will, you're better off counting photons 1 by 1, so that it takes a long time for your camera to reach the maximum count (the count where overexposing starts).
Have you heard of a barn door tracker by the way? A super cheap solutions for allowing longer exposures without (much) star trailing.