NEOWISE
When I got there, there was still hope that it could clear off so I set up and started the timelapse.
Despite the increasing clouds I let it run away on the off chance that the cloud might reverse itself, and well, thats what you want in a timelapse.
Although that did not happen, I captured an ISS transit, a little bit of the comet rising when the clouds were thin, and a lovely, colourful sunrise.
I chose a 5 second interval, and I started the sequence when the comet was at about -3 degrees, hoping to catch the tail rise.
The settings at that time were iso 5000 and 3s exposures @ f/2.8. I leave a 2s gap for processing.
The camera has to send a jpg to the iphone/app for analysis via wifi, then the app may adjust the settings and send the camera new instructions in that 2s gap.
As the dawn progressed those settings were adjusted to keep the same brightness per frame, ultimately ending up at exposures of 1/2000s iso 500 and f/3.5 (still being taken in 5s intervals).
I took my Honda generator down to the lake, its fairly light and quiet.
Mark helped me a lot with Orienteering. But at the end of the day I used an app called Spyglass to determine my camera position vs the horizon.
I noted that when the comet was at -3 degrees altitude it was at 19 degrees azimuth.
And the field of view of my camera/80mm lens is 24 degrees x 17 degrees.
19 +24 = 43 so I took the easy way and put the right edge of the frame at 45 degrees east, with a little foreground but mostly sky.