QUOTE (thecyclists @ Aug 27 2009, 08:59 PM)

Anyone that has experience with astro-photo?
What I'm looking for are other users experience with using dSLR on a telescope and opinions on which telescope to buy.
BTW - I got Canon dSLR (but I guess all dSLRs can be used).
Here is a shot I took last week of the Andormeda Galaxy. (colour/greyscale/procesessed for punch)
http://www.datarescue.com/life/kepler/20090823/The camera used was a Canon 40D with a 520mm 2.7 optical train, from my suburban backyard in Belgian (very very poor skies).
A few pointers
- Canon cameras are great choices for astrophotography.
- you should shoot RAW at all times.
- while the cameras have an optimal ISO, especially as far as read noise is concerned, if you shoot RAW and do a proper calibration, you don't really care. I've used 100 and 1600 with roughly equivalent results.
- most deep sky objects are dim. You'll need to take long exposures, 5 mins per shot is a good choice.
- you'll need to take bias and equivalent dark frames wich you will average and then substract from the individual shots.
- you'll have to align and stack your shots to increase the SNR
A very good and easy to use program for this purpose is DeepSkyStacker 3.3
As far as practical issues are concerned
- you'll need a very good mount, or at least a mount you can guide accurately.
- if you shoot with a DSLR and a relatively large sensor, you'll need a decent optical system.
- if you spend $10K plus on the mount, you can probably do 5 mins unguided exposures (that depends on the focal length of course). If you have a dark sky, you can do really nice things with smallish lenses on a primitive mount.
- if you have an average mount, you'll have to guide.
There's really a lot to say about this field. The forums of www.cloudynights.com are a very good place to start. There's also a very good intro to "photon counting" by Craig Stark on the front page.
Enjoy!