The image below is straight off the Seestar50. It is a 10minute automatic stack of 10s images

How to Find M104 (Sombrero Galaxy)
• M104, the Sombrero Galaxy, is located in the constellation Virgo, near the border with Corvus.
• The easiest way to find it is to start at the bright star Spica in Virgo. From Spica, move west to a line of three 5th-magnitude stars (such as 49 Vir, ψ Vir, and χ Vir), then go south from χ Vir to M104.
• Alternatively, you can use the star Gienah (Gamma Corvi) in Corvus. From Gienah, look just to its north-northeast for a line of stars known as the “Crow’s Arrow” or “Stargate” asterism. M104 lies just to the northeast of this pattern.
• M104 is best seen in spring and is visible through binoculars or a small telescope under dark skies, shining at magnitude +8.0.
About the Sombrero Galaxy (M104)
• M104 is a striking edge-on spiral galaxy about 28–31 million light-years away in Virgo.
• It has a bright central bulge and a prominent dark dust lane, giving it the appearance of a sombrero hat.
• The galaxy is massive, with a total mass of about 800 billion solar masses.
• M104 hosts a supermassive black hole estimated at about 1 billion solar masses-one of the largest known in nearby galaxies.
• Its diameter is roughly 49,000–105,000 light-years.
• The galaxy contains a large number of globular clusters, even more than the Milky Way.
• M104 was discovered in 1781 by Pierre Méchain and later included in the Messier catalog.
In summary, M104 is a photogenic and massive galaxy, easy to locate with a telescope in spring, and famous for its hat-like appearance and massive central black hole.