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#1
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Last time I had alignment problems but this time i spent one hour
reading a whole lot of instructions on my mount documentation and managed to get the polar right there in the middle of the circle. I did 2 star alignment ( can't do 3 star because i have only access to the south/west and 60 degres only from horizon. Also did PEC training for 5 mns. Only when i was magnifying 250 times (3mm eyepiece) i could notice a slight shift on the right and down but not noticeable within 5 seconds. Put the dsi on and pointed on M13. nothing was moving. After a few pics (about 10) with 1s exposure the combined image became fuzzy and not good at all. first pic was better. Then clouds came and the whole thing stopped. While i was listening to the promotional videos tonight, i realized that the guy draws a box around a guide star for tracking purposes. I did not do that because i thought that was linked to autoguiding which i don't do. maybe this box is not used to autoguide but to tell the system that even if there is a shift, this star is the same as the one in the previous picture and the software does not give fuzzy composites. am I right ? will try next time. |
#2
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On Jul 8, 6:26 pm, pascal wrote:
Last time I had alignment problems but this time i spent one hour reading a whole lot of instructions on my mount documentation and managed to get the polar right there in the middle of the circle. I did 2 star alignment ( can't do 3 star because i have only access to the south/west and 60 degres only from horizon. Also did PEC training for 5 mns. Only when i was magnifying 250 times (3mm eyepiece) i could notice a slight shift on the right and down but not noticeable within 5 seconds. Put the dsi on and pointed on M13. nothing was moving. After a few pics (about 10) with 1s exposure the combined image became fuzzy and not good at all. first pic was better. Then clouds came and the whole thing stopped. While i was listening to the promotional videos tonight, i realized that the guy draws a box around a guide star for tracking purposes. I did not do that because i thought that was linked to autoguiding which i don't do. maybe this box is not used to autoguide but to tell the system that even if there is a shift, this star is the same as the one in the previous picture and the software does not give fuzzy composites. am I right ? will try next time. Might want to give the manual another read through. You _must_ draw a box around a star in order for the program to be able to accurately stack frames. Also, "no movement for 5 seconds" is not close to good enough; you'll need to refine your polar alignment more. Unk Rod |
#3
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Also, "no movement for 5 seconds" is not close to good
enough; you'll need to refine your polar alignment more. I see. I thought a slight shift at 250x would be tolerable. Perhaps that's what u get with Heq5 mounts. And plus this is on a steady flat ground. Actually I have to press the right arrow and the down arrow of my hand controller to avoid drifting.This every now and then. I read the explanations about how to correct drifting but it is a bit complicated, isn't there any quick method like: * if you need to press right arrow to correct the shifting then increase the angle of the mount to be 46 degres instead of 45 degrees (+ 1degree to match the polar axis) * if you need to press the right arrow then , facing north, kick the right foot of your mount by 1 cm thanks |
#4
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On Jul 9, 8:41 am, pascal wrote:
Also, "no movement for 5 seconds" is not close to good enough; you'll need to refine your polar alignment more. I see. I thought a slight shift at 250x would be tolerable. Perhaps that's what u get with Heq5 mounts. And plus this is on a steady flat ground. Actually I have to press the right arrow and the down arrow of my hand controller to avoid drifting.This every now and then. I read the explanations about how to correct drifting but it is a bit complicated, isn't there any quick method like: * if you need to press right arrow to correct the shifting then increase the angle of the mount to be 46 degres instead of 45 degrees (+ 1degree to match the polar axis) * if you need to press the right arrow then , facing north, kick the right foot of your mount by 1 cm thanks Hi: No. The HEQ5 is more than capable of taking unguided 30 second exposures. It has PEC too. If you can't get your alignment good enough using a polar scope, drifting is the answer: http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/drifting.doc In these instructions of mine, you can disregard steps 2 and 3 for your setup. Unk Rod |
#5
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Thanks Rod, haven't tried it yet (there is a constant depression over
western Europe) but is seems more simple and handy than what I have read so far (e.g "if the star goes down, bring it to the left with azimuth adjuster" instead of "move the north side of the mount towards the west" which i got on the web) Pascal. |
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