AP 1100 PHD2 Calibration and Guiding
Hello everyone, I passed this situation by George, but he does not use PHD2 guiding and really had no answers. Recently I received my second or actually third AP mount. I sold my 900 and upgraded to the 1100 which is scheduled to be my portable mount. I wish I would have kept the 900, but CFO would not allow it. Thanks in advance for any help. |
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Ross Salinger
If you post a log then we might notice something that's amiss.
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When calibrating with PHD on all my mounts I just the same cadence that I use when guiding but I don't think that it matters much as long as the calibration star generates plenty of signal. Have you tried using Multi-Star. That was a godsend for me when imaging in my backyard when seeing was poor. When PHD calibrates it moves the step size until (default from memory) it reaches 25 arc seconds but the step back to zero uses MaxMove instead. So, that's why the reverse direction looks quite different. Rgrds-Ross On 10/25/2022 12:48 PM, Emilio J. Robau, P.E. wrote:
1 second or the expected exposure during actual guiding which for me has generally been between 4 and 8 seconds. |
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Thanks Ross, I really appreciate any responses. The cadence is the correct term. Do you know if PHD2 calibrates in RA first? I am almost sure it does. |
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Emilio, First, everything you describe in your paragraph about how the calibration happens is exactly what I see with my AP1100 and PHD2 and I would consider that to be normal. In particular, the RA calibration first moves one direction in 8-10 steps and then moves back to the starting position in 1-3 steps with the "fast recenter" checkbox enabled in the Guiding tab. Perfectly normal. I typically use 3s exposures for both calibration and guiding (sometimes 4-5 for guiding). I would suggest using the guiding assistant on a steady night and follow the recommendations produced by the assistant. But pay attention to the backlash setting in the Algorithm tab. For a while I tried to play around with that after the guiding assistant said to enable it, but eventually I just turned backlash compensation off and have been happy since. joel On Tue, Oct 25, 2022 at 2:48 PM Emilio J. Robau, P.E. <ejr@...> wrote:
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Joel, Thank you for the commentary. That is really helpful. A while back ago pursuant to recommendations from Roland, I canned trying to use the backlash setting. Thanks again for the support. |
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Hi Emilio Ross mentioned this earlier, and I agree, if you can upload a guidelog any feedback would be far more meaningful based on your data rather than conjecture It would be even better if you could use the baseline guidelog creation steps outlined in this document to create a guidelog: That removes a lot of variables so we can better see what may be mount related and what may be settings related This is what we use over at the PHD forums (in addition to being an AP customer I am also one of the main support contributors in openPHD) Brian On Tue, Oct 25, 2022 at 1:03 PM Emilio J. Robau, P.E. <ejr@...> wrote:
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Brian Brian Valente astro portfolio https://www.brianvalentephotography.com/astrophotography/ portfolio brianvalentephotography.com |
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ap@CaptivePhotons.com
As mentioned, logs will help a lot.
The last few nights have been all over the place for me guiding. Seeing has been pretty bad, especially down lower to the horizon (I usually start at 25-30d), and then decent in the middle of the night, notably higher. Bad like guiding around 0.4" with periodic peaks to 0.7" or so, good like 0.2x" other times. Last night was worse because of wind, so even when seeing improved I had a fair number of excursions from wind blowing. I mention this because we are close enough together it might be similar. Make sure you aren't just fighting a bad night. I often calibrate at 1s just from impatience, and seem to get a good calibration. I also often just use the regular exposure if I'm doing it in a sequence. I can't see any real difference between the two. My guiding is in the 3-5s range usually. I do have encoders so going much longer also works for me, but I do not because of wind. You might want to separate using a model from guiding at first, just to eliminate one possible source of problem or misconfiguration. Though that seems unlikely. But I have managed to screw up models and make it worse. Backstop: Mine came from AP with enough play if you push on the bottom of the motor box (toward the mount body) it moves very slightly, maybe 1/2mm and it takes only slight pressure to move it. I don't know if that's correct, but mine works and both are the same. A guiding assistant run inside the log would be helpful of course. We should meet at big cyprus with them and compare notes sometime. Though now the clouds seem to be coming back. Though a tandem rig doesn't sound very portable? Anyway, nearby (sort of) if I can help. Linwood |
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Thanks everyone. Yes, Lynwood a trip to Big Cypress is soon upcoming. I am still working out the bugs. My homemade Newtonian has issues with the diffraction spikes being doubled up on three of the vanes, which I am thinking means that the vanes are not completely parallel to the incoming light. In addition, I still don't seem to have the spacing right. What a pain. Even a simple Newtonian is not an easy build at least for me. I am going to take it off and replace the spot on the tandem rig with my poor man's 130GTX, an ES 127ED FCD100 with an AP27TVPH. Hopefully Roland will make me a 130 this next run and my name comes up and I can sell the ES. Anyways, this will make the rig much more portable.
Last night, I deployed the two scopes in the observatory and the 1600 guiding was once again good. However, I did find a mistake in my settings which showed guiding better than it actually was. I tweaked the distance between the APTVPH and the chip on my 12" GSO RC to eeek out a little more speed and reduction and failed to change it on my AP drivers and my PHD2 Settings. I went from a fl of 2000 to a fl of 1900. So the readings were a little better than was actually happening. The issue is now fixed. Then, I found an issue with my OAG on my 1100 dual tandem rig. My focus for the OAG was not good to say the least. I had not realized this. I could not rack in the focuser sufficiently to achieve excellent focus. I was off quite a bit and could not notice it until I started to really drill down. I fixed everything by pulling the OAG forward and adding a spacer behind it. I was able to achieve excellent focus. Guide readings improved as expected. The two tweaks resulted in readings that are very close to each other on the two rigs all things considered. I don't know what it is about my brain, but I can't seem to discern good seeing from marginal to bad seeing. I reported good seeing, but that was because my settings on the 12" GSO associated with my PHD2 guiding on an OAG was not correct. Seeing was okay last night. The wind died down as you know. Anyways, I am a little less anxious about my 1100 "tracking" issue. It is probably not an issue at all. I think the fixing the two errors in my setups resulted in converging readings for both of my mounts that point to the excellent racking I am used to from my ap mounts. I was able to get the second night of data on M33 in the observatory and killed the 1100 imaging due to the issue with the Newt. Tonight I will switch out the newt and try imaging with both rigs, weather permitting. I am going after those beautiful clusters Dean just imaged centered around NGC 633. I have imaged those before and want to go back. What a beautiful field. |
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ap@CaptivePhotons.com
On Wed, Oct 26, 2022 at 11:02 AM, Emilio J. Robau, P.E. wrote:
Yes, Lynwood a trip to Big Cypress is soon upcoming. I am still working out the bugs. Last night for me the clouds were a problem early, then pretty good, but wind had an impact. I went from 0.15 or so at one point up to 0.4. At least I think it was wind, though I monitor wind about 8' from the OTA and there was only a loose correlation at best with what I was seeing. Interesting comment on focus and the OAG. I've found the OAG train from ZWO (OAG-L, EFW, ASI camera) yields focus VERY close to the bottom of the focuser draw tube. I have about 2mm travel left. I'm getting a Photon Cage which I think may improve this (more space to the sensor, closer overall focus, raised guide camera -- hope I'm thinking right). But there's little room to spare there. I had been told many times that guide focus does not matter much - I'm convinced they are just wrong. I get significantly better results if I cut the guide HFD in half (which is easy to do, it takes just a tiny amount of change, at least on my refractors). Makes me rethink thinking that those with electronic focusers on their guide camera were over-kill (also makes me think that filter offsets would be useful there for filter changes). |
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I wanted to cap off this thread. Lat night I established my horizon limits. I ran a new model for my 1100 tandem rig with 78 points. I had no plate solve failures. Focus on the OAG was achieved with great accuracy. I aligned my home made Newtonian secondary vanes. I recollimated the scope. I re-calibrated utilizing a one second cadence. I used the guiding assistant to establish the min move values. I did not do anything with backlash. The results were astonishing. The mount RMS was at 0.23 to 0.35. The tracking was as good as it gets.
I am thrilled to have another perfect AP mount. Congratulations to AP for continuing to produce the world's finest German Equatorial Mounts. |
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Roland Christen
Thanks, nice to hear things are working well for you.
Rolando -----Original Message-----
From: Emilio J. Robau, P.E. <ejr@...> To: main@ap-gto.groups.io Sent: Thu, Oct 27, 2022 10:02 am Subject: Re: [ap-gto] AP 1100 PHD2 Calibration and Guiding I wanted to cap off this thread. Lat night I established my horizon limits. I ran a new model for my 1100 tandem rig with 78 points. I had no plate solve failures. Focus on the OAG was achieved with great accuracy. I aligned my home made Newtonian secondary vanes. I recollimated the scope. I re-calibrated utilizing a one second cadence. I used the guiding assistant to establish the min move values. I did not do anything with backlash. The results were astonishing. The mount RMS was at 0.23 to 0.35. The tracking was as good as it gets.
I am thrilled to have another perfect AP mount. Congratulations to AP for continuing to produce the world's finest German Equatorial Mounts. -- Roland Christen Astro-Physics |
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Sorry for the ask, do you have encoders?
Im a new owner to be, this would be my second mount, my first is a 10 micron. I don’t want to go into shock with above .3 Guiding. |
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