Mesmerizing discussion guys! I really wish we would get into more of these as a community of PI users. Its great to help folks get over the start up hurdles, but we have a mass of experienced talent represented in just this post, not to mention the community at large, that we can actually make a difference in helping the new folks go to the next level of analysis. Now for my two cents, for what little they are worth:
About the only "scientific truth" we know is the basic square root rule, namely you "only" improve SNR at the square root of the number of images taken. Thus, I double my bang, going from 1 sub to 4 for the "cost" of only 3 extra subs. I like to shoot 36 subs (sorry Warhen
![Roll Eyes ::)](http://pixinsight.com/forum/Smileys/default/rolleyes.gif)
) since it works out nicely that I am getting 6x improvement in SNR and going from 5x to 6x "only" cost me 11 subs for a 20% gain. But the next jump takes 13 for 16.7%, then 15 for 14%, etc., etc. (please feel free to correct my numbers here as I am a liberal arts guy who dabbles in math as a hobby, not a career
![Shocked :o](http://pixinsight.com/forum/Smileys/default/shocked.gif)
).
So far so good. Its a "simple" and straight forward analysis. That is until you add in everything else we have been talking about so far and some we haven't, including the quality of your sky, the number of clear nights available to you, your imaging goals, the dynamics of your CCD, the focal ratio and aperture of your scope, whether you have an anti-blooming gate (some of us have sacrificed that for higher quantum efficiency), and, most importantly, the target you are chasing.
For me and my skies (some of the best skies 7300 ft up a mountain in NM has to offer) and set up, I am firmly with Warhen that beyond a point (pick a point, any point), you are wasting your time chasing ephemeral gains by stretching out the number of subs you shoot, UNLESS you are striving for a truly difficult and faint target. But for most targets, your restrictions are based on the resolution of your scope which comes down to aperture. At some point, you have captured all the meaningful data you can use and its time to move on to the next image.
I most heartily welcome all the brickbats you can throw at me. That's how we all learn.
THANKS for a great discussion!!
Best,
Jim