Hi Andrew. Some mounts with absolute encoders seem to require a slightly different approach to guiding. The issue is that the encoders can “silently” continue to move the mount even after the mount driver has reported completion of a guide command. From a software point of view, this is of course undesirable because the driver is unintentionally misrepresenting the status of the guiding operation. On the other hand, if the tracking accuracy is very good, there is no need to use a high guiding rate (cadence) to make mount corrections. One approach is to use a normal guide camera exposure – in the range of 1-2 seconds to retain high a SNR – but to force a delay between the completion of a guiding operation and the start of the next guide camera exposure. The theory is that this will give the encoders time to complete their activity before the next guide camera exposure is started, thus bypassing the driver’s inability to know what’s going on. This can be accomplished with the time-lapse control in the Advanced Settings dialog:

Users have reported that some well-constructed, absolute-encoder mounts can work well with guide commands being issued at something like 10-second intervals. This allows the guiding software to correct for polar alignment error, flexure, and atmospheric refraction without running afoul of the encoder activity. I don’t know if this would apply to your mount, but you could certainly try it.
Further, I think the LowPass2 algorithm might be a better choice for declination assuming that guiding corrections are only needed for the slow tracking errors mentioned above, particularly polar alignment error. You can also experiment with further reducing the aggressiveness settings to further reduce the likelihood of the guiding conflicting with the encoder activity. With respect to your goal of guiding below 0.5 arc-sec RMS, that will depend a lot on your local seeing conditions. Judging from your short Guiding Assistant run, I’m not convinced your seeing conditions on 2/17 were good enough for that. That might also explain the relatively large star-sizes you were getting (greater than 4 px) assuming you’ve done a careful job of focusing the guide camera.
If you decide to experiment with these changes, please let us know how things go. Even with what you’ve done to this point, you’re likely to be getting good results on your main camera images with nicely round stars. Very rapid deflections and immediate corrections like you’re seeing here are quite often invisible in the final images although I understand your interest in reducing them.
Regards,
Bruce
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This discussion has taken quite a different turn from where I thought we started. If the Dec axis doesn’t have an absolute encoder, then obviously the Dec deflections you see have nothing to do with encoder activity. So I don’t think it’s a question of how to fine-tune PHD2 to work with your mount – I think it’s more a matter of understanding the limitations of the mount. Here’s an illustration of some poor Dec behavior – note this is well after you disabled PHD2 Dec backlash compensation:

You can see that direction reversals on the axis become unstable. When the guide pulse is south (down), it takes two consecutive guide pulses to get the axis moving – at which point it overshoots. For the north (up) guide commands, the mount immediately over-corrects. This can be caused by imbalance of the scope in Dec and/or by stiction in the Dec drive. I assume you’ve disabled any form of Dec backlash compensation in the mount controller. By the way, this also agrees with the GA result you got where a 900ms backlash was measured. That’s consistent with the need for two consecutive south moves before the axis moves. So I think you probably need to reset your expectations a bit about the mount’s capabilities, at least in Dec, and expect that it probably exhibits some of the common problems found with non-encoder mounts in its price range.
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