Loooong Exposures [using digital camera]
March 10th, 2010
-Shea
I looked in the owner's manual for my XT, it doesn't say. It basically just says that it's going to be noisy and that you might want to use the noise reduction custom function...
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So is there some number of minutes that you wouldn't recommend going over on a regular basis? I have a XTi
Thats all I really know, but I am sure that some of the higher end cameras can do a better job with noise and such.
OP: What are you trying to take a picture of?
Attach the XTi to laptop via USB cable and setup the canon software to take and x second exposure every x seconds or x+1 seconds if your camera get's narky about it like the Nikon D200 does. Then stack the images together using the max function. The stars will trail but the light pollution won't get any worse.
It's no substitute for darkness though since there's only so many stars you can see through pollution :(
Just remember the D80 and the XTi have plastic bodies. If the body is warm then the sensor is HOT. A 60min exposure made my camera very bloody hot (metal body). By all means go for it just be careful.
For the OP: No without special hardware you can NOT do an exposure that long with a digital camera.
a) batteries will die after about an hour of continuous exposure.
b) sensor noise kicks in after a few minutes and pixels start dying leaving bright spots on the image.
c) thermal bleeding occurs and a pink haze starts eating into the frame from the edges of the sensor
d) sensors get hot. So hot they ultimately destroy themselves. My D200 has lasted for an hour exposure but the image was entirely unusable and the camera got nearly untouchably hot, but I've heard of a EOS350D which was sent to the repair shop after taking a 40min exposure and cooking the sensor.
Grab yourself a film body. It works and the images are much better.
the longest i have done, as i said above was about 10 mins. I would like to do some star trails though, but the whole light pollution is a problem.
sure, its probably technically a time lapse, but i just cant think of why ELSE anyone would need a 12 hour exposure, so i figured maybe the OP meant it as in star trails or maybe photographing a deep space object. Maybe you could clarify for us, gatzke??
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