Shoot stars planets and other nebulae with a camera that is.
Manual barn door tracker.
A barn door is a specialized type of equatorial mount.
More information on other types of barn door tracker can be found at starnamers blog and a motorised version is detailed on this aticle on petapixel.
To drive your tracker you will be rotating a threaded rod.
It is a simple but effective way of eliminating the star trail effect of night sky photography without expensive equipment.
The double arm design was first described in an article by dave trott published in the february 1988 issue of sky telescope magazine.
This guide is for a manual single arm version which consists of a single arm board and is operated manually by the user.
If you re in the northern hemisphere this is as simple as pointing your tracker s hinge at the north star.
There is a motorized version of this mount.
No arduino no stepper motors no gears just a simple motor turning a threaded rod this barn door tracker rotates your camera at the exact same rate as the rotation of our planet a requirement for taking long exposure photos.
Calibrating the barn door tracker with a digital level.
The mount shown here employs a type 4 double arm design.
A followup appeared in.
The design is known from the 80 s as a barn door star tracker or a scotch mount.
The modest success of the manual version encouraged me to motorize it.
There are many types of barn door tracker.
Then i let it run with my tracker for a while and did some least squares fitting to see how it was working.
A barn door tracker is a camera attachment camera mount used to capture long exposures of night sky images.
Tracking was accomplished by continuously turning a long inch screw at a rate of one revolution per minute while the exposure was in progress.
With a barn door tracker it s the same concept except you align the trackers rotation with the rotational axis.
Note also the red dot sight for alignment.