I wish I could get Google sky for my k5. That would make aiming shots like this 
a lot easier.

Alternatively you could in theory set the ogps on a target and it could tell 
you how to correct on subsequent shots. It's just a simple matter of 
programming.

Darren Addy <pixelsmi...@gmail.com> wrote:
>You are technically correct, Stan. But I was out there for approx. 75
>minutes to get my 6 minutes of integrated exposure time. After doing
>the precise calibration, a lot of my first shots were complete misses
>(Andromeda not even in the frame). And then when I finally located it
>and started taking images, I was trying to find the maximum amount of
>time I could expose and not get star trails. For me, in this part of
>the sky, with this lens, on this night, that max was about 45 seconds.
>I then rejected over half of the images that I shot, only stacking the
>very best (which ended up to be 11).
>
>So, if one could go out, locate the object immediately, and get 100%
>"keepers", the sky would only be rolling for 10-20 minutes or so. But
>the reality is that you need to shoot more than you keep, and you need
>to get the object in the frame first. I'm looking into better ways to
>do that, but mostly they involve mounting a Telrad (or other laser
>projection "finder") beside the camera and looking in the exact same
>place. Then that plate, with camera and Telrad mounted, would have to
>be put on the ballhead and oriented around.
>
>On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 8:46 PM, Stan Halpin
><s...@stans-photography.info> wrote:
>> Huh. I had imagined that you would locate the target or target
>region, set the camera, fire a series of shots, and then stack away.
>From your comments it seems that you need to re-target the target for
>each shot. I know the stars are "moving" relative to us, but I hadn't
>thought they would move that significantly in 6-8 minutes . . .
>>
>> stan
>>
>> On Oct 15, 2013, at 9:24 PM, Darren Addy wrote:
>>
>>> Thanks to all who have looked (and/or commented). The image is a
>crop
>>> of what I got from doing an "overlap" stack in DSS. It is difficult
>to
>>> frame each sub-exposure exactly the same (particularly when simply
>>> using a ballhead), but with DSS that doesn't matter because it will
>>> stack only the common parts of each image. From that result I
>cropped
>>> in even closer resulting in the "centered" composition that Stan
>>> didn't care for. I could have left more stars on the right and
>bottom,
>>> but I guess my thinking was more like what Paul expressed earlier.
>>> Also, the nature of astrophotography, particular with the lens near
>>> wide open, is that the edges will drop in quality due to coma, CA,
>>> etc. I didn't really have M31 centered well in any of the shots. It
>>> was mostly left-of-center or lower left. So again, lots of room for
>>> improvement with future images - even of the same subject. It is a
>>> learning experience and I have a LOT left to learn.
>>>
>>> I don't see the banner either, but I'm also a paid account (if that
>>> makes a difference). Rather annoying to hear about, though. : \
>>>
>>> By the way, I had a couple of astro imagers suggest a free PhotoShop
>>> plugin called HLVG (HastaLaVistaGreen) which I think I will
>>> find/download and try on this image. I thought I got the green out,
>>> but apparently not enough.
>>>
>>> To Larry's earlier question... not sure about stacking software for
>>> the Mac. I believe Steve Sharpe mentioned one up-thread.
>>> DeepSkyStacker and Registax are the two biggies (both free, I
>believe)
>>> on Windows. If anyone is interested, I can share a good link that
>>> helped me with the histogram/curve part of DSS.
>>>
>>> On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 8:07 PM, Larry Colen <l...@red4est.com>
>wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 08:38:04PM -0400, Paul Stenquist wrote:
>>>>> As I said, a fabulous shot. But what's with Flickr putting a
>banner in the corner of your frame, covering part of the image -- "Try
>our New Photo Experience." And people complain about ads on photo.net??
>Bizarre.
>>>>
>>>> I don't see that baner.  But then, I have a paid account.
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Larry Colen                  l...@red4est.com        
>http://red4est.com/lrc
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>
>>>
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