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Old 11-04-2024, 10:17 AM
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cafuego (Peter)
Take me to your ******

cafuego is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: North Melbourne
Posts: 19
If ll you have are lights, you don't really need to use the scripts for stacking.

On the main conversion window, click the `+` and add all your lights. Then enter a sequence name, untick the `Symbolic link` box, tick the `Debayer` box at the right hand side and click `Convert`.

When done, go to Registration, leave as-is I guess (deep sky) and register all images. Then go to plot, right click any dots on the plot that have a much higher FVWM then the average and exclude them, then stack.

Doing that exclusion step will get you a sharper result than the script would.

After stacking, I *usually* run photometric colour calibration first.

Now, turn on auto-stretch and run `Background extraction`. Since you have no flats, you'll need this. Do not let it generate automagic points, instead set the smoothing to 1, then manually add points in each corner and in the middle of each edge. Do not set them on a star, but on a dark bit. Nothing in the center of the image. Select `Division` and then compute background.

The image will get noisier, but there should be less vignette. This is fine. Turn off auto-stretch and set it back to linear.

Then starnet star removal. Remember to tick the Pre-stretch and Recompose boxes.

Actual stretching on recompose is a dark-ish art, but there are fairly decent video tutorials that show you how it works :-)

Mostly the trick is to not set the sliders right in one go, but adjust a bit, then apply, then adjust again, until you see faint detail and do not blow out bright areas.

Good luck!
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