Is there a general consensus about what is the best dual band filter to use on an OSC camera for a Hubble palette, besides the Ha/OIII?
Would that be an SII/OIII or an SII/Hb?
Hello, Willlem!
As far as I know, you can create a synthetic SII channel if you want to use the Ha-OIII filter only. But usually, you would use the SII-OIII filter to capture SII.
Hope this helps. Clear Skies!
Interactive Sky · Jun 2, 2026 at 06:07 PM
Hello, Willlem!
As far as I know, you can create a synthetic SII channel if you want to use the Ha-OIII filter only. But usually, you would use the SII-OIII filter to capture SII.
Hope this helps. Clear Skies!
Thanks, a synthetic SII sounds intriguing. One would think that the SII signal would be independent from the other two?
So your advice is the SII/OIII over the SII/Hb.
Thanks very much, and clear skies to you as well!
Willem Jan Drijfhout · Jun 2, 2026, 03:46 PM
Is there a general consensus about what is the best dual band filter to use on an OSC camera for a Hubble palette, besides the Ha/OIII?
Would that be an SII/OIII or an SII/Hb?
I would go quadro-chromic and get an Antlia SII/Hb DNB. Not cheap though…
How does the Optolong L-eXtreme compare to the Antila filter you’ve recommended?
I don’t think they are comparable, one is Hbeta-SII and the other is OIII-Halpha. If you mean the ALP-T then it is much better than the L-Extreme but then one is 5nm and the other is 7nm (in fact even more). Performance with fast systems is the real discriminant here and there is no real alternative to Antlia for that.
Thanks Andrea……I think I’ll take a look at the Antila. May be a higher price but the filter is forever.