This moon shot was taken with a Canon A710 IS mounted on a tripod with a Canon TC-DC58N 1.75X tele-converter attached, for an effective focal length of 376.5mm. Other settings: Av mode, f/4.8, ISO 80. I’ve found that I must use the auto-focus for sharp images. I also use spot metering to get the exposure correct, as well as the 10-second timer.
I also leave the IS on "Continuous", and just set "Converter" to "TC-DC58N" so that the IS compensates correctly. The IS on Canon compacts doesn't drift so I never worry about it.
I used the CHDK software to get a RAW file from the camera. I then used Raw Therapee to process the image. I used the VNG-4 demosaicing algorithm, and the RL Convolution sharpening method. Thanks to RAW and Raw Therapee, it’s definitely one of the best moon shots I’ve taken with my A710.
Below is the same image. The moon on the left is the JPEG from the camera. The moon in the center is the unprocessed RAW image. The moon on the right was processed from RAW and sharpened using unsharp mask with an "edges only" modifier. The JPEG has detail but looks very flat and for some reason its detail has a "blob"ish look. The unprocessed RAW shows you just how much processing needs to be done after a capture. The processed RAW has slightly more detail than the JPEG, but more important it has a more 3D quality to it.
The two RAW processed moons look nearly identical until you zoom them 200%. At that point you can notice the edge-sharpening artifacts in the second RAW processed moon, whereas the first doesn't really show any sharpening artifacts at all.