Perfection is a terrible thing, being both difficult to define and impossible to achieve. It can stand in the way of getting something done, and lead a person to reject things that fail to meet your estimation of perfection. It has led me to consider getting rid of my old Tamron 135 mm lens. (Yes, I'm talking about that lens again. I could subject you to more battery talk, but no one really wants that, right?)
The Tamron was dropped from my integrated flux nebula imaging project for two primary reasons: the mounting ring I had made it all but impossible to consistently orient the camera, and it was showing too much aberration.
I've now purchased a much better ring from Agena Astro. This ring and the dovetail it's on will also help with the limited rotation the old one allowed. The extended ring release knob release knob also eliminates the difficulty in turning the old knob, which was tight against the ring itself. I doubt the new ring will be "perfect," but it may be much more adequate that what it replaces.But what if it wasn't? Watch this video. The imager is attaching an ASI 2600MM (my camera) with the same ZWO EFW as mine, a 135 mm lens (not the same as mine, sadly. She had the Rokinon 135 mm lens that I continue to lust after), used the same Canon-to-M42 adapter as mine, and a 1 mm spacer ring for a total backfocus of 43.5 mm (the same as mine). That gets her nice flat fields, so it's probably the case that my backfocus isn't the issue, it's the lens quality.
A late-1970s Tamron at f/4 is no match for a modern lens like a Rokinon even if their inflation-adjusted prices aren't all that different. The obvious fix is to stop the Tamron down, perhaps to f/5.6. To do this without spiked stars requires a 58-24 mm step down filter adapter. (I found a 58-25 mm adapter on eBay ($2 + $15 for shipping), so I'll be shooting at f/5.4, which is close enough. Delivery date is projected to be August 18, two days before the Northern Nights Star Fest.
These two issues settled (perhaps) the Tamron will continue to live.
If it arrives in time, I'll take it north and skies permitting put it to work on this:
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Heart and Soul Nebulae with the Double Cluster |
This is a very rich field
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Above image with annotation |
so much nebulosity and open clusters, too!
First priority will be collecting the green and red channel light frames to complete the IFN image. That should take only one night with time left over for more luminance frames. The Tamron will come out on the second clear night, assuming there is one. If the Tamron's aberration is still significant, I may switch to my 200 mm Olympus lens which has already proven itself to be flat-field at f/4. The Olympus will narrow the field to just the two nebulae.
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In terms of comfort sky clarity this summer has been one of the worst on record, with days and nights alternating between excessive heat and humidity, rain and severe weather, overhead smoke, and very poor air quality. In fact, half the days since mid-May have featured one of these unpleasantries (per the State Climate Office). My hope that the smoke will diminish before NNSF is only that, a hope. I'm fairly sure the fires will be much reduced by the time of the Iowa Star Party in October, but it would be nice if the new moon in September is also smoke-free!
We're currently in the midst of a multi-day air quality alert covering the entire northern Midwest. Yesterday morning the air smelled of sulphur and the sky has been a perpetual brown.
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Air Quality Map @ 2 PM CDT 08/01/2025 (graphic from fire.airnow.gov) |
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August 1 brings more tariffs, and it's time to check on that Rokinon lens. The "new" tariff on on South Korea is about the same as the existing one, so it's no surprise that the Rokinon is holding steady at $449.
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That's all for this time, next post is in late August with results from the NNSF (I hope!)
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