Product Description
The StarGuy White Light Solar Filters allows you to photograph sunspots, eclipses and planetary transits with your camera. The design blocks 99.999% of the intense light from the sun and allows so you can take photographs of solar events or view them safely through your telescope.
The solar filter is placed in the direct path to the sun. It is the first surface that the sun hits before passing through the telescope or camera.
The StarGuy thread-in filters display your image with no color tinting as happens with many glass filters. StarGuy Solar Filters are manufactured using Baader Film. The film is extremely tough and will not break or tear easily. The Baader film has a “wrinkled” surface. This is part of the design, and does not affect the quality of the images you see or photograph.
There are a number of other brands of filters that stretch and smooth out the material, but this will impact the quality of your images. (When stretched tight, the filter works like a glass un-coated filter, delivering inferior image quality and safety issues.)
The StarGuy Filter ring is a lightweight aluminum alloy coated with a non-reflective finish. This model of the thread in filters fits the front of 67mm lenses.
Please note, for your safety and that of your equipment, never look directly at the sun or point your camera at the sun without the correct solar filter.
FAQs
- You should not use a photographic filter for visual observing of the sun.
- · You can use a visual filter as a photographic filter, but your images may need longer exposures and therefore not be as sharp.
- · Be sure to examine the filter before each use to assure there are no holes or tears.
- · Cover your finder scope. Do not use this if you have no filter on the finder scope. Covering it ensures that no one looks through it accidentally.
- · Wait for at least 15 minutes after affixing you filter to ensure that the filter and your equipment equalize temperature.
- · If using an open tube telescope, cover the open section to ensure no light enters the sides which can cause damage to your instrument and the filter.