Why "Stacking Only" Is Holding Your Astro Photos Back
For years, beginner astrophotographers have been told the same advice: "You don't need gear. Just take 500 short exposures and stack them on your computer."
It sounds like a great "free" hack, but relying on it 100% is holding you back.
The Trap of "Stacking Only"
Beginners are often told, "Just take hundreds of short exposures and stack them!" It sounds easy, but in practice, there are cons to this approach too:
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Massive Storage Requirements: You will rapidly fill hard drives with hundreds of gigabytes of RAW files for just a single final image.
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The "Data Wall": To double your noise reduction, you need four times the amount of images. Eventually, taking more photos stops helping.
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Computer Meltdown: The stacking process generates massive temporary files. Processing 500+ high-resolution images at once can fill up scratch disks and crash even a powerful 10-core CPU.
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Missing Details: This is the dealbreaker. With short exposures (10–20 seconds), your sensor never collects enough photons to register the faint outer faintness of a nebula. You cannot stack signal that was never captured in the first place.
Why a Star Tracker Changes Everything
A star tracker counteracts the Earth's rotation, allowing you to extend your shutter speed from 15 seconds to 60, 120, or even 300 seconds. This fundamental shift improves your image quality in three critical ways:
1. Drastically Improved Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR): By tracking for minutes at a time, your sensor becomes a "light bucket," collecting massive amounts of photons. The signal overwhelms the noise, resulting in a naturally clean, smooth image before you even start editing.
2. Superior Dynamic Range & Color: By tracking, you can drop from ISO 3200 down to ISO 640 or 400. This preserves the "dynamic range" of your sensor, meaning stars retain their natural colors (blue, orange, white) instead of blowing out to pure white.
3. Unlocking Faint Details: Deep sky objects, like the dust lanes in the Orion Nebula or the arms of Andromeda, are incredibly faint. A tracker allows the sensor to "soak" in that light long enough to register it.

The Best of Both Worlds
When you use a tracker, you can still stack your images—but you stack fewer, higher-quality frames.
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✅ Manageable Data: Save your hard drive and your sanity by processing 30 images instead of 500.
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✅ Deep Details: Capture faint nebula dust that short exposures miss.
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✅ Clean Images: Stacking software can still use "Kappa-Sigma Clipping" to mathematically erase satellite trails and hot pixels, giving you a flawless final result.
How to Choose a Star Tracker (Without Breaking the Bank)
Introducing the NOMAD Star Tracker.
The NOMAD is designed for the beginner who wants professional results without the heavy gear or heavy price tag.
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Pocket-Sized Power: Unlike bulky trackers, NOMAD literally fits in the palm of your hand. Perfect for hiking and travel photography.

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Zero Learning Curve: Only 3 switches: N (North), S (South), and OFF. No complex menus.

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Hassle-Free Setup: One tripod, one camera, one NOMAD. That’s it.

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Instant Polar Alignment: Forget the complex polar scope. Just attach the laser pointer, aim at Polaris, and you are tracked and ready in seconds.

What is its price, and which kit should I choose?
You don't need to spend thousands to capture the galaxy.
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Beginner Setup: Get started for just $284.

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Already have ball heads? Grab the NOMAD + Laser Kit for only $250.
