Hello Dogz. I have acquired much more and much better images this summer. Some through the awesome Canon 50mm 1.8 lens that I bought, lets much more light in that the other two lenses I have. So here goes...
You can click the images for bigger versions.
Cygnus at 50mm with 4.5 hours of total exposure.
Basically all the main sights of Cygnus are visible - leftmost and brightest is the star Deneb, under it are the North America nebula and immediately to its left the Pellican nebula and a few other wisps. The bright star in the upper center is Sadr and is responsible for illuminating the vast Gamma Cygni nebulosity surrounding it. There is a very very faint sign of the small Crescent nebula but it's really so faint that it took me 10 minutes and some star charts just to find its trace, it looks like a transparent oval something twice the size of Sadr directly up and right of it. The third bright star on the lower right is Gienah and the two cyan wisps of nebulosity to its right are parts of the elusive Veil nebula, a supernova remnant. The bunch of stars on the right edge of the frame is the open cluster NGC 6940. There's also M29 but it just looks like an odd shaped star right of Sadr.
And here's the Omega and the Eagle nebula (left and right respectively) at 300mm and 134 minutes of total exposure. Image is rotated 90° to the right from how it looks from northern latitudes.
And an altered crop of the above image showing the famous pillars of creation in the eagle nebula. I'm glad it shows since I didn't expect it as it's really very small and I thought I'd need a proper scope.
IC 59 and IC 63, faint nebulae around Gamma Cassiopeiae, which is the star in the central tip of the W shape of the constellation Cassiopeia. This is a very difficult object and a test of sorts of the limits of my abilities with this equipment. Not very good but they show at least, though the lower one should be red but I apparently didn't capture the color with only 2 minute sub exposures that I did. This is 4 hours total exposure, I may add more to it. Color balance sucks, space isn't green. This is shot at 300mm.
Probably my finest photo so far.
Andromeda Galaxy at 250mm, two and a half hours of exposure at 250mm. Its smaller satellite galaxies M32 and M110 are also visible.
Looking towards the center of the Milky Way in the constellation Sagittarius. Only an hour exposure at 50mm. Lots and lots of dark nebulae, the most prominent being the huge Dark Horse nebula on the right (which is actually made of several smaller and separated nebulae). The Lagoon nebula is the purple thing in "the rift", Trifid nebula is seen right above it, as well as lots of star clusters dotting the image. Finally, M24 aka the Small Sagittarius Star Cloud is the white bunch of stars at the left edge of the image, while the so called Great Sagittarius Star Cloud is the brightest part of the Milky Way at the bottom left of the image, it's actually a window through the vast dust lanes of the Milky Way towards the center of the galaxy most densely packed with stars, hence why it's so bright.
45 minutes of Lagoon nebula (big one) and Trifid nebula (small one), (both are visible in the above picture) M21 open cluster (left above Trifid) and open cluster NGC 6544 in the lower left corner. There's a lot of stars here because it's looking near towards the center of the Milky Way. The stars at the edges are warped because this lens has crappy optics, should have stopped it down further. This is at 300mm.
Antares (star in center) M4 globular cluster to the right, and the lower part of Rho Ophiuchus Cloud Complex, a large dark nebula, in the upper part of the picture. (this is just to the right of the Dark horse nebula two images up)
This one is horribly underexposed with only 17 minutes worth of exposure, and I post-processed a bit too much to brinh out the dark cloud and then brought up the noise level as well, then had to overdo with noise reduction so yeah. It looks ok if you don't look too closely.
I plan to do this one again properly with more than an hour of exposure to bring out the colorful eye candy that is abundant in this region. Will have to wait for the next summer though, as this will not be visible until then.
Crop of Antares, M4 and a more distant globular cluster NGC 6144 (between and above the former two) from the above photo (with less noise reduction).
And more galaxies. M81 (left) and M82 (right), along with three more members of the "M81 group": NGC 3077 (left above from M81), NGC 2976 (lower left corner) and NGC 2959 (very very faint, near the bottom of the image just left from the center, below and to the left of the six small stars in a vertical row). At 300mm, only an hour exposure and needs lots more to bring out the blueish color of M81 and reddish detail on M82. I'm keeping the raw files I have so will just add to them when I take more photos.
Image of the Double Cluster and the Heart and Soul nebula at 50mm ruined by horrible light pollution from a fishing ship that created a light dome with its lights the size of a small city. Had to aggressively post-process to get rid of the LP and get the nebulae out. Will be better next time.
The rig in action