
ND100,000 that'll make for some extreme long exposure photography
will need to look into those
It may be "safe", but take a look at the photos in this article to see what just a bit of sunlight can do to a camera. Then imagine all that energy focused directly on to your sensor...and other say it's safe to shoot as long as you use your live view?
If you're using a big enough lens, you can spot meter off the sun (once you've got your solar filter in place of course). Apart from that it's hard to say because it depends so much on exactly what filter you're using, and on how clear the sky is on the day.And any tips on the camera settings?
I think closer to 20 stops is preferable. 10 stops is about a factor of 1000 and you need a factor of 100000..
I said closer. 10 stops at a factor of 1000 is not nearly enough.20 stops would be 1,000,000.
Would an infra red filter work for this?
Steve.
Yes.I read somewhere that the light reflected from the moon is 1/1,000,000 of that from the sun directly. So you can take shots in moonlight using the sunny 16 rule + 20 stops (or should that be moony 16?!).
10 stops is 1024.
16 stops is 65,536
16 2/3 stops is 1,040,449 (which is very close to your 16 stop suggestion for 100,000)
20 stops is 1,048,576
I read somewhere that the light reflected from the moon is 1/1,000,000 of that from the sun directly. So you can take shots in moonlight using the sunny 16 rule + 20 stops (or should that be moony 16?!).
Steve.
I doubt it, maybe a typo
For the price of a sheet of Baader film (I ordered mine on Monday night, it arrived today) why risk damaging your camera, lens and possibly your eyesight as well????
It's cheap as chips, works 100% without any colour cast and it's safe. I made a filter in about 10 mins, I figured that I wasn't going to become a solar tog so why spend £££s on a glass based filter.Oops, I had a typo! I got the right one wrong.If 10 stops is 1024, 20 stops is 1024 x 1024 = 1,048,576.
It's the 16 2/3 stops I got wrong. It should have been 104,044 (or 104,044.9 to be far too accurate).
Steve.
Yes, except that the little bit of the sun which you can still see will be much brighter than at sunset. It's the intensity of the sun that's potentially harmful, not the total amount of illumination, so you still need to take precautions.I'm guessing pointing that towards the sun is all right as its pretty much the same as a sunset right?