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Hi Clayton. Can you tell us what your guiding setup is? Judging from the image scale, it looks like you’re using a separate guide scope assembly. If so, these are the kinds of excursions we often see with those things – something loose or moving around on the guiding assembly or a brief cable snag that can cause these apparent oscillations. Having a very accurate mount doesn’t exempt you from these kinds of problems and I don’t think you can assume this has anything to do with the mount.
Good luck,
Bruce
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Hi Clayton. In my experience, nearly everyone who uses a rig like this thinks there’s no way it can move around – and they’re usually mistaken. There are a couple of things to not like about this arrangement:
Finally, through-the-mount cabling is no guarantee of freedom from cable problems. The cables can intertwine in there and they won’t typically have the same lengths. So the shortest cable may end up pulling on the rig at various pointing positions. The best guide scope arrangements I’ve seen use clam-shell type fasteners rather than thumb-screws and keep the optical axes of the two scopes as close together as possible. They also typically have a mounting point closer to the guide camera to reduce sag in the focuser.
None of these may be problems for you. But if I was the mount rep, I’d ask you to guide through the main scope and demonstrate the problem that way. And just personally, I’d never settle for anything less than an OAG for a mount as expensive as this. That’s just a personal opinion, I don’t want to offend you, and obviously you need to apply your own judgments on this. Perhaps doing some guiding tests through the main scope will shed light on the situation.
Regards,
Bruce
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