Hi Steve, welcome to the group. Thanks for taking the time to look at this yourself and provide all this context. Since you asked some specific questions, I’ll answer them in-line and then I’ll make some suggestions at the bottom.
From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:open-phd...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Stephen Pattinson
Sent: Friday, November 29, 2019
1:35 AM
To: Open PHD Guiding
Subject: [open-phd-guiding] Help
with interpreting log from CGX-L mount
Hi,
Ref log file - https://openphdguiding.org/logs/dl/PHD2_logs_IRPv.zip
I'm relatively inexperienced with PHD2 & guiding, and my Celestron CGX-L mount is pretty new too, but from my examination of the PHD2 log using the PHD2 Log Viewer, and just watching the RA & DEC variations when logging, the guiding and perhaps the performance of the mount does not seem up to expectations. I don't however really know what to expect, so some experienced advice would be great.
Relevant equipment is a ZWO 280mm guide scope with an ASI178MC OSC camera mounted on a CGX-L mount. The imaging equipment is current a C9.25 in the Hyperstar config (FL 540mm) with an ASI071 camera.
Log section (ie as shown by the Log viewer program) shows the calibration. This I think looks ok to my untrained eye. See also attachment Phd2Cal.png.
Yes, the calibration looks fine. As a general rule, if the calibration completes without significant alert messages, it should be fine. You can help things a long a bit with your mount by manually clearing the Dec backlash right before you start the calibration. You can do this by briefly slewing north or using the hand-controller to move the scope north at guide speed until you clearly see the stars moving in the PHD2 display. You did encounter a number of lost-star events during calibration which is not a good thing although not a big problem in this case – more on that below.
There are two log sections where I have run the guiding assistant, sections 5 & 6. The attached file GuidingAssist4.png captures the screen at the end of the section 5 guiding assist. Unfortunately I failed to capture the screen at the end of the section 6 guiding assist, however, in that case, I did get a figure for backlash (unfortunately not noted at the time)
All of this info is in the logs, so you don’t need to worry about recording these results or doing screen-shots. Screen shots are usually unnecessary unless you’re looking at a very specific thing that you want us to see.
In both the guiding assistant runs, the Dec performance seems okish, but the RA deviates a long way before the guiding re-commences and it's yanked back to the correct position. In run 5, the RA deviates about 30" in 12 minutes, and in run 6, the deviates about 13" in about 134 minutes in the other direction. Is that reasonable? Does it indicate a hopeless RTC in the mount?
Nothing hopeless here. Remember, during a guiding assistant (GA) run, guiding is disabled so you’re looking at the unaided tracking behavior of your mount, warts and all. That’s why the guide star is “yanked back” to its starting location, it’s just a consequence of guiding being turned on again. You have quite a bit of drift here because of your polar alignment error, but the RA data you’re looking at is the sum of the drift and uncorrected periodic error.
Perhaps the long term drift may be compensated by PHD2, but the RA performance seems to have other issues. There is a significant short term variation of about 2-3" p-p at about 21.3 hz according to the frequency analysis. This is admittedly only a couple of pixels, but reading other posts, it does seem high.
The best view of your RA mount behavior is in guiding session 11 and it clearly shows the periodic error situation:


You probably want to find a way to program a periodic error correction into the mount. I don’t know what the worm period is on this mount, I thought most Celestron mounts had a period of 478 seconds. The high-frequency error at 21 sec is definitely a headache and is unfortunately well-known for some of these mounts. It’s too fast to be guided out and I don’t know if people have found mechanical solutions for it. Peter Wolsley is on the forum here and he has an in-depth understanding of these Celestron drive systems so he will hopefully offer his opinions.
Using a 4sec samples, I don't think this is seeing, but maybe it is? Could my use of an OSC camera as the guide camera be causing problems?
I think the guide camera is exacerbating a lot of the problems. You’re getting too many lost-star events and even with long guide camera exposures, the SNR is fairly meager. You’ll notice the GA recommendations said to re-examine the focus on the guide camera. If the guide camera isn’t critically focused, PHD2 is going to be working large, mushy guide star images and the guiding will suffer. Using an OSC for a guide camera is generally not a good idea although it can obviously be done. The Bayer filters on the sensor really reduce the overall sensitivity. All of this pushes you in the direction of longer guide exposure times, but your mount probably won’t tolerate that. You probably need to be done in the 1-2 sec range of exposure times in order to help tame the RA tracking error you have. One thing you can do to reduce some of the lost-star events is to disable the ‘star mass detection’ feature in PHD2, it’s not helping you at this point. (Advanced Dialog/Guiding tab).
Presumably the variation at about 400 seconds or so is periodic error. I can't find a reliable number for the RA gear period of this mount. It may be different to the CGX. I guess the periodic error is correctable, but it seems to be swamped by the larger long term variation.
At the end of the guiding assistant run 6, I did accept the recommendations. Section 11 shows an actual guiding session about half an hour long.
The RA performance seems pretty awful. Is this typical. I see lots of suggestions that the RMS error should be less than 1". There also appears to be uncorrected periodic error, but it's the jagged nature of the RA position that concerns me most.
Session 11 is not a great estimator of your performance because you were pointing too low in the sky. You started with a pointing altitude of 29 degrees, so you were down in the seeing weeds, shooting through 2x the atmospheric mass. Even so, the RA tracking performance is clearly your limiting factor at this point.
So, some general or maybe specific advice would be welcome. Is this reasonable or have I got a serious problem.
Just to recap then:
Hope this helps,
Bruce
Thanks very much.
Cheers
Steve
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Hi Steve,
I too own a CGX-L mount. One issue I notice in your data is the same 21.4 second harmonic in RA that I had in mine. (See attached frequency analysis from the PHD2 Log Viewer tool.) Note, this was the analysis from your Guide log dated 2019-11-29 section 11 when guiding for 32m & 53 sec.
This harmonic has its source in the RA drive train. Essentially given the 300 second time period of the RA worm gear which when divided by 21.4 one gets a occurrence of 14 times per worm cycle.
In visually studying the mechanics of RA drive train I noticed that this is the exact number of teeth on the drive sprockets. Upon close inspection of the drive belt as the mount slowly turned (via the HC), I observed the issue is caused by a stretched timing belt in which the pitch of the timing belt is longer than the pitch of the sprocket on the drive motor. As the timing drive belt meshes with the sprocket as each tooth snaps into the sprocket it pulled the belt causing uneven (spike) movement in RA and hence the observed spike in the charts. As you are operating at F/2.2 or so, this movement will be less evident in your pictures. For me at f/7.0 it was a significant problem.
I purchased a quality replacement timing belts for both RA & Dec. BTW, the belt is 10mm wide with T2 (5mm) pitch and 165mm long having 33 teeth. It is described by vendors as model PN: 10T5/165. The belt I purchased had stainless steel mesh was highly flexible and did not stretch! (Unlike the low cost rubber one supplied on the mount.) To install them, I actually sent the unit back to Celestron who installed my replacements and tuned the mount under warranty. Unfortunately I have not yet tested the fix as I’ve been running my old mount in my Obs and did not want to take the time to reinstall my CGX-L. (BTW, I will know the results in the next month or so.)
Hope this is helpful.
Norm
From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com <open-phd...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Stephen Pattinson
Sent: November 29, 2019 4:35 AM
To: Open PHD Guiding <open-phd...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [open-phd-guiding] Help with interpreting log from CGX-L mount
Hi,
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Hi Steve. The PHD2 guider settings generally take care of themselves unless you’ve entered the wrong information into the new-profile-wizard (yours are fine). You’re in the situation that many beginners encounter, your guiding results are being limited by the capabilities of your mount. Whether this actually limits your imaging results is a different question, something only you can determine. I would say, if you’re taking an engineering perspective and expect to see excellent mechanical performance from your mount, you may not be happy with anything in this price range.
With regard to periodic error, this is *approximately* what the native tracking behavior of the mount looks like:

It’s approximate because it’s an imputed curve from the session 11 guiding period, which as I said before was done in a poor part of the sky. If you do a GA run over a time interval that covers a couple of worm periods, you’ll get a direct measure of the PE. Anyway, this looks like a peak-peak PE of somewhere between 20 and 35 arc-sec, which is pretty poor. I don’t know what you should expect from the mount but I’ve seen commentary elsewhere to suggest it’s worse than expected. If we now look at the guided performance for the same session, we see this:

So PHD2 guiding has reduced your 20-35 arc-sec periodic error to something that looks more like 5-7 arc-sec. And in this view, many of the large variations in RA are no longer occurring at the worm frequency, they are much more rapid. I think this is about all you can expect from reactive guiding algorithms, and a 4-5x improvement seems pretty good to me. Your next step should clearly be to get a good periodic error correction programmed into the mount. In the meantime, you could try the PHD2 predictive PEC algorithm (PPEC), giving it an initial period length of 300 seconds. That should improve the RA guiding, with or without PEC programmed into the mount.
I’m also attaching a long-winded explanation of what PEC really is and how it’s different (and complementary to) the PHD2 PPEC algorithm.
Good luck,
Bruce
1. Try to insure you have a critical focus on the guide camera. The “Star Profile” section in the Help guide describes one approach to this although other techniques also work. You should probably be trying for HFD star values that are 3 or below – yours were over 5 in this log.
2. Try to reduce your exposure times down to the 1-2 second range while getting lost-star events. You may need to consider upgrading your guide camera to avoid the color sensor limitations.
3. Look into doing a periodic error correction on the mount.
Hope this helps,
Bruce
Thanks very much.
Cheers
Steve
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https://openphdguiding.org/phd2-best-practices/
Or in the help file under ‘Automatic Calibration’ (4th paragraph):
https://openphdguiding.org/manual/?section=Basic_use.htm#Automatic_Calibration
If you’re way the heck south in Australia, the pointing position for Dec=0 might be low in the sky. If so, you can move the scope further south to improve that situation, down to Dec -20 won’t have any effect. For you, it may be a trade-off between seeing and proximity to Dec = 0. All of this is equally true for the GA run although there’s less sensitivity for the GA. You don’t want to do GA runs at low sky altitudes, again because of the seeing.
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Hi Steve,
Celestron said it would take 5 weeks for them to get a replacement. (And it would cost be the same low-cost clone.) The original belt was made of rubber with a few cotton internal thread and subject to stretching due to over tension.
The polyurethane replacement belt would not stretch at all and therefore requires the gear mechanism to be loosened off then tightened once the belt was installed on the sprocket. The old one meanwhile can be stretched off/onto the sprocket with relative ease.
To my surprize they had no issue replacing it with the one I supplied. To me it is sad that they would risk using a low quality clone timing belt in their high-end mount which is specifically rated to carry a C14 EdgeHD scope for use in astrophotography. But I guess that is all one gets for a product made in China where they do anything to save a dollar.
Here is a link to a typical replacement belt: https://beltzoom.com/products/10t5-165ug-synchro-link-trapezoidal-metric
BTW, I’m delayed from the testing the CGX-L since I want to put a PEC table into my iEQ45 PRO portable mount and in ON, Canada there are very few clear night right now.
I will post the results when they are available.
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If you are referring to the mount-based PEC, it doesn’t surprise me it won’t take care of a smaller harmonic like a 20 second period.
My G11T has a similar situation, where PEC takes care of the primary periodic error but leaves a 39 second secondary.
what I do is guide at 1 second exposure using the PPEC algorithm and I set the period of PPEC at 39 seconds and turn off the auto adjust period. It’s a bit of a brute force approach but it works surprisingly well for me. So just a thought for you

Thanks
Brian
portfolio https://www.brianvalentephotography.com/
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Things look better
The main challenge you have right now is your RA (as you’ve pointed out), but more specifically your RA is about 2x your DEC RMS, so I recommend looking at your stars closely and checking for eccentricity (roundness). I’m guessing they are a bit oblong
One thing you can try regarding improving the 21 sec is using PPEC algorithm on your RA
Set the period to 21.9 and turn off auto adjust period
Keep guiding around 1 sec – maybe experiment between 0.5 and 1 sec
You are going to be on the cusp of chasing seeing but also trying to tame this short period.
I’ve had good luck with this approach and a 39 second harmonic periodic error
Thanks
Brian
portfolio https://www.brianvalentephotography.com/
From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com [mailto:open-phd...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Stephen Pattinson
Sent: Saturday, December 14, 2019 4:05 PM
To: Open PHD Guiding <open-phd...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [open-phd-guiding] Re: Help with interpreting log from CGX-L mount
Hi again,
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On Jan 9, 2020, at 12:55 PM, peter wolsley <wols...@gmail.com> wrote:
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Hi Steve. You’re not likely to get a better analysis than this one from Peter, certainly not from me. J So I’ll just respond to your question about the guide star image in the OAG. This looks typical for these Schmidt-Cassegrain systems, where the star shape suffers from a combination of coma and field curvature. You might be able to get some benefit from re-collimation but I think the comatic star-shape will probably still be present this far off-axis. It shouldn’t be a problem for guiding because the centroid algorithm doesn’t make any assumptions about star shape. The only downsides are similar to those of having a soft focus – the SNR for the star is lower than it could be and you may not be able to take advantage of fainter stars in the field of view. But people have been guiding with stars like these for a very long time.
Hope this helps,
Bruce
From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com [mailto:open-phd...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of peter wolsley
Sent: Saturday, January 11, 2020
1:06 PM
To: Open PHD Guiding
Subject: [open-phd-guiding] Re:
Help with interpreting log from CGX-L mount
Steve,
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Hi Steve
Just to clarify, you should collimate your scope for your imaging, don’t sacrifice that for a ‘good’ star shape in PHD. The OAG is on the periphery and with a Schmidt-Cassegrain it will likely never be as round and good as the imaging portion of your telescope. In other words, expect it will be a little wonky. If you are happy with your images, don’t collimate it for PHD’s sake
Brian
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