Help with another DEC pattern

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Magnus Larsson

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Nov 13, 2017, 2:49:11 AM11/13/17
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Hi!

Here is anonther DEC pattern that is new to me, as of tonight. See the attached image and PHD log file. I'm using a guide scope with 500 mm focal length, and a Losmandy G-11 mount. The weather was nice, almost no wind. I was indoors asleep for most of the time, so I cannot say there were no wind gusts. But they would not cause these drifts, would they?



Best,

Magnus
PHD2_GuideLog_2017-11-12_225125.txt

Andy Galasso

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Nov 13, 2017, 7:49:30 PM11/13/17
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Hi Magnus,

I'm not completely sure what that pattern means, however I do see from your guide log that you have your G11 dec motor thrashing back and forth.  Your dec min motion is set to 0.05 px, so basically every little seeing-induced wiggle calls for a correction. Your Dec aggressiveness is set to 100%, and you have a 452ms PHD2 backlash comp enabled.  The result is excessive dec corrections alternating back and forth.  You can run the Guiding assistant to get a recommendation for a more reasonable min-move setting based on observed seeing motions. Also, you can reduce the dec aggressiveness if dec is still chasing the seeing.

Inline image 3

Here's an example of the kind of thing you should be shooting for -- notice the infrequent dec corrections correcting slow dec drift (and not chasing seeing):

Inline image 1

The seeing conditions were a lot better there, so it's not really a fair comparison, but the main point is that the goal should be for very few dec corrections, with reversals introduced rarely if ever, except for dithering.

Andy

Magnus Larsson

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Nov 14, 2017, 2:41:09 AM11/14/17
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Hi!

Thanks, Andy!

Yeah, I know. This is precisely the nice curve I am aimin for. I've been fiddling a lot with aggresiveness, backlash and min motion. This time, it was all set high - as an attempt to come to terms with even more movements. I guess I'm in a sense hunting seeing, but interestingly, I get far better results with 1 sec exposure and somewhat aggressive settings, than with say 2 sec exposures. But there are many factors in that.

For the moment, it seems that my Dec has become worse, and this odd saw.-like pattern is totally new to me. I am wondering if there is anything mechanically wrong (introduced recently). I've tried tightening all screws I can find (guide scope, az and elevation on mount, guide cam in guide scope etc). I'm wondering if the backlash might grow on me and play tricks - on the G11 this is a matter of adjusting the "blocks" where the worm gear runs (not sure about the english terms here). Or is this a matter of bad PA or strange balance (for some reason)?

What I try to do is focus on one of the two axes at the time and experiment to improve it. This time it is Dec.

Interestingly enough - I imaged tonight as well, and this saw-like pattern is not there at all. Better values with aggressiveness set at 40 and min motion at 0,15. But still far from what I'd like (the slow pattern).

So any ideas wecome - I'll keep experimenting!

Magnus

peter wolsley

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Nov 14, 2017, 11:05:48 AM11/14/17
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Hi Magnus,
I studied your guiding log and I am concerned that your mount has a big problem with DEC backlash.  And by big I mean really big...big enuf that you should be able to grab ahold of your telescope and visibly see that the DEC axis has some play in it.  It could be that your guide camera or how it is mounted has this play in it.  You mentioned that you have been working on your mount.

I attached a graph I created using your guiding log.  I used the same timeframe that you highlighted in your original post.  The DEC guidestar deviation is shown as that tiny darker red squiggle along the center of the graph.  I filled in this squiggle so that it is a little easier to see the sawtooth patterns.  PHD2 is always trying to keep this squiggle as small as possible.  If you keep track of all of the small corrections that PHD2 sent to your mount's DEC axis during this timeframe you would end up with the thicker red line shown here in a slightly lighter shade of red.  If you look carefully at the sections where you saw these sawtooth patterns you can begin to understand what PHD2 was up to during these events.  In my opinion these sawtooth events are DEC backlash events on a mount possessing a hugh amount of DEC backlash.  I estimate the DEC backlash to be in excess of 100 arc-seconds which immediately makes me thing I got things wrong!...it's seems too big to be true..I also know that it can happen so I can't immediately dismiss it.

The sawtooth pattern arises when a mount has some polar alignment error and it experiences a DEC backlash event.  My understanding of what happens is that the mount starts off keeping the DEC guidestar errors close to zero by applying small DEC corrections that overall slowly move the DEC axis in one direction.  At some point, typically due to too much aggression combined with seeing issues, the DEC axis is told to move a little to far which causes the DEC guidestar error to change polarity.  The DEC axis has now drifted into it's backlash zone and the only way to correct the DEC guidestar error is to move the mount thru it's DEC backlash and finally make the needed correction.  Those big downward loops in the light red trace illustrate how PHD2 tried to do this.  In my opinion, PHD2 never did move the mount thru it's entire backlash...it simply was too big.  During these big loops your DEC axis was wandering thru it's backlash and the DEC position of your telescope was essentially frozen. This "frozen" characteristic of your DEC axis allows the DEC guidestar error to show you the polar alignment drift that occurs when you don't move your telescope to correct DEC.

So, my conclusion would be that your mount has a lot of DEC backlash.  Something is loose...guide camera, brackets, saddles, gearmesh etc.  I would also guess that it would be all but impossible to calibrate your mount in PHD2 right now.

I may be completely wrong...I might be spot on.  Hopefully this helps you find the source of your DEC problems.

Peter
DEC Backlash.jpg

Magnus Larsson

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Nov 16, 2017, 2:21:47 AM11/16/17
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Hi!

Here's a follow up on this (I hope I post it correctly - there are two different "reply" buttons...)

I've been checking all I can and cannot find anything that is loose or that could cause backlash. That is not to say it is not there. I also used the guiding assistant yesterday, output below.



So how bad is this backlash?

I've not seen the "saw" pattern since I posted it. What I've done is extensive polar alignment, and mabe that has helped.

However, yesterday, I had another experience that I cannot understand, concerning the DEC. Early in the evening, I imaged M33 and got the guiding results that I expect - what I used to get until about a week ago. At this point in time I had the mount to the west pointing east. See logfile called "first_log" and here's a screenhot.


I think this looks quite good, right, Andy?:) More similar to the one you posted, and actually what I used to get. Here I have the DEC aggressivness turned far down, and little backlash compesation.

Because of bad transparency, I stopped imaging and did other things. A few hours later, I resumed - this time with mount east pointing west (capable of running the whole night with out meridian flip). And M33 was close to the meridian. Now I get a very different pattern in DEC, and far worse guiding results. This is the situation where I up until about a week ago consistently had 0.7-0-8 RMS total. There was not much wind, still and nice, but quite damp outside, so seeing was not that good. Guide log attached, called "second_log". I paused and ran the guiding assistant - and got this pattern. THis surprised me. First: DEC does not drift consistently, but oscillates in a way I'd expect from RA but not from Dec. Secondly, DEC follows RA very very closely. What is going on here....?

I also noted that when turning guiding output totally off from DEC, I get the same oscillating pattern, but very little in terms of drift. I ended up finally turning aggressiveness somewhat up, guding set to auto, and little backlash compensation, and shorter exposures. Then there came clouds and I feel asleep...

Any ideas on this is warmly welcome. Obviously, my guiding has deteriorated vastly over the last few weeks. I have not changed anything but of course moved stuff in and out (do not have an observatory) although the mount itself is left where it is (sheltered of course).

Magnus
first_log.txt
second_log.txt

Magnus Larsson

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Nov 16, 2017, 2:23:14 AM11/16/17
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Oh yeah. Should say: I have suspicions about a backlash culprit, and that is the DEC gearbox. But that cannot be what causes the big oscillations when guiding is turned off, right?

Magnus

Andy Galasso

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Nov 16, 2017, 2:53:52 AM11/16/17
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Hi Magnus,

I'll try to look in more detail tomorrow, but the most obvious thing that comes to mind regarding the oscillating Dec pattern in the GA run around 23:49 would be that your calibration was somehow invalidated by a rotation of the guide camera.  Is there any chance at all that the camera could have rotated between the time you did your calibration (2017-11-15 19:34:27) and later that night?   Does your guide scope have a rotating focuser that could be rotating over time (I once had a guide scope that had that problem)?

Andy

Magnus Larsson

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Nov 16, 2017, 3:06:42 AM11/16/17
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Hi!

Thanks a lot for looking at it!

Well, I would not rule anything out. However, I changed the position of the guidecam slightly on the afternoon yesterday, then fastened it again (although I apparently forgot to secure the focusing, that that cannot account for rotation). I just checked it. It is tightly fastened. And no rotator. I didn't touch it between the sessions.

However, given the MF between these, I wonder if there is something with this. Cables becoming tight? Although east pointing west is where cables have MORE slack. I like the idea of invalidating calibration. How else could that be accomplished? Could it be that PHD2 was not aware of my MF, thereby messing things up? (I use Indi/Ekos for scope control and imaging).

Magnus

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Andy Galasso

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Nov 16, 2017, 6:43:10 PM11/16/17
to Magnus Larsson, OpenPHD Guiding
On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 3:06 AM, Magnus Larsson <mag...@vista.se> wrote:

However, given the MF between these, I wonder if there is something with this. Cables becoming tight? Although east pointing west is where cables have MORE slack. I like the idea of invalidating calibration. How else could that be accomplished? Could it be that PHD2 was not aware of my MF, thereby messing things up? 

The calibration would become invalid if there was a rotation of the camera, which you seem to have ruled out. (I don't know what MF stands for... Motorized Focuser? Magnus's Focuser? :)   The focuser can't be a problem for PHD2 calibration unless it's a helical focuser that rotates the camera. 

The next thing I would try is doing a Guiding Assistant run for a few minutes after you do your initial calibration and see that the slow dec oscillation is absent. If you see it the dec guiding deteriorate, I would try running the Guiding Assistant again like you did last time, then, assuming you see the dec oscillation, re-run a calibration to confirm that the calibration angle has not changed.

Andy

magnus

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Nov 17, 2017, 2:38:54 AM11/17/17
to Andy Galasso, OpenPHD Guiding
:)

MF = meridian flip.

I believe I did a flip manually that night - between the two guide logs. Hrm.

Going to test again tonight.

Magnus



Skickat från min Samsung Galaxy-smartphone.

-------- Originalmeddelande --------
Från: Andy Galasso <andy.g...@gmail.com>
Datum: 2017-11-17 00:43 (GMT+01:00)
Till: Magnus Larsson <mag...@vista.se>
Kopia: OpenPHD Guiding <open-phd...@googlegroups.com>
Rubrik: Re: [open-phd-guiding] Re: Help with another DEC pattern

Andy Galasso

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Nov 17, 2017, 1:46:21 PM11/17/17
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Ah, meridian flip, got it.

Your INDI driver is reporting side of pier to PHD2 so PHD2 is able to adjust the calibration after the meridian flip. If that were not working then you would experience runaway guiding in dec after the flip, so the problem we're seeing is a bit more subtle than that.

I think running a new calibration after you see the problem develop (and have confirmed the the slow dec oscillation matching the RA oscillation by running the Guiding Assistant) would be to run another calibration so we can look at the log to see if the calibration angles have changed.

Andy

Magnus Larsson

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Nov 17, 2017, 3:01:07 PM11/17/17
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Hi!

Here are some updates from tonights session. I cannot repeat the oscillation in Dec that follows RA. However, there seems to be somthing going on when I do a meridian flip.

First, I have the scope west pointing east, pointing south, a little bit over the equator. This is the calibration data, the GA, and a bit of guiding graph. The graph is as I would expect, between 0.7 and 0.9 arc sec RMS total








Then I flipped the mount. Now east pointing west. No change in anything else. Here is the GA, GA graph,  and a bit of guide data:







Now there is quite some difference. But stil no DEC oscillation following the RA. the polar aligment suddenly is far worse. And tracking in RA is far worse as well. So I did a new calibration, the data is here:




And after this, voila, a far better guide result:



I think I got it right. Log is attached, including some quite failed imaging in the end, due to wind, I guess. So my question for tonight (a new question every night, it seems...:)) - how can the polar alignment shift so much when doing a meridian flip? What is going on here?


Magnus




Magnus Larsson

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Nov 17, 2017, 3:03:19 PM11/17/17
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Log was not attached. Here it is

Magnus
PHD2_GuideLog_2017-11-17_170050.txt

Andy Galasso

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Nov 18, 2017, 3:04:39 AM11/18/17
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Yeah, no more sign of the dec oscillation in that log, I guess you'll just need to keep an eye out for it.

my question for tonight (a new question every night, it seems...:)) - how can the polar alignment shift so much when doing a meridian flip? What is going on here?

That's strange, I'm not sure what to make of that. Is it possible that something could shift when the weight shifts to the other side of the meridian? Is the tripod on a solid surface or soft ground?  Another idea would be to repeat that experiment but try keeping the scope close to the meridian both before and after the MF.

I see you had some good long runs of decent guiding.  I did notice a few of these dec shifts:

Inline image 1

I'm not sure what could cause that. Suddenly, between one frame and the next, the dec axis "flops" by 7-10 arc-sec and phd2 reacts to correct it.

I saw the same pattern a few other times in the log, for example this one:

Inline image 2

I'm not sure what would cause this sudden motion of just the dec axis.  Something binding or bumping (or wind) would usually disturb both axes, but RA does not seem to be affected.

I would want to take a close look to see that there was nothing that could mechanically cause the dec axis to shift as you are tracking. Perhaps putting a little weight bias on the dec might make it more stable and less prone to shift?  A 10-arc-second shift at a distance of 500 mm would be a shift of 0.02 mm so we're talking about a tiny wiggle that might be pretty tricky to isolate.

Andy

Magnus Larsson

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Dec 5, 2017, 2:40:12 AM12/5/17
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Hi!

Here's a kind of follow up - somewhat loosely coupled to the original topic, but I choose to post it here for consistency in regards to my situation.

I have now disassembled, cleaned and regreased the mount, and tried to adjust the worm gears with as much precision as I can. I've also worked on the polar aligment, so it is at this moment in time about 2 arc min off at most. I see no significant differences in GA output when doing the meridian flip anymore (pointing at the meridian), and I have not seen any more oscillation in DEC following the RA pattern. I've trained ("manually", that is not through PemPRO) and turned on PEC.

What happens now is that I get some DEC spikes. THey all seem to
1. go in the same direction. Direction shifts after meridian flip. However, I'm not sure how that is represented in the graph - is "guiding North" thus the opposite direction for the mount after meridian flip? If so, the "side" of pulses are consistent in terms of the mount.
2. be triggered by a pulse.

I take this to be the effect of backlash compensation. How do I understand this? At times backlash compensation works nicely, and then suddenly, there is way too much....? In the end, as seen in the log, I turned backlash comp off, and then changed to guide only north. And then no more spikes. But no other backlash problems either.

So, if it works nicely without backlash comp, how come PHD2 insists on a backlash compensation of up to more than 1000, when turned on?

Practically, I guess this indicates that I should turn it off. But I'd like to understand it as well :)

Interestingly, as seen by the two guiding sessions, guiding RMS was some 15 % worse after meridian flip (the chaotic end of first session was caused by reaching the limit, and I executed a meridian flip, repostioned and restarted guiding.

Any ideas warmly welcome!

Magnus
PHD2_GuideLog_2017-12-04_194008.txt

bw_msgboard

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Dec 5, 2017, 10:57:44 AM12/5/17
to Magnus Larsson, Open PHD Guiding

Hi Magnus, see below.

 


From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com [mailto:open-phd...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Magnus Larsson
Sent: Monday, December 04, 2017 11:40 PM
To: Open PHD Guiding
Subject: Re: [open-phd-guiding] Re: Help with another DEC pattern

Hi!

Here's a kind of follow up - somewhat loosely coupled to the original topic, but I choose to post it here for consistency in regards to my situation.

I have now disassembled, cleaned and regreased the mount, and tried to adjust the worm gears with as much precision as I can. I've also worked on the polar aligment, so it is at this moment in time about 2 arc min off at most. I see no significant differences in GA output when doing the meridian flip anymore (pointing at the meridian), and I have not seen any more oscillation in DEC following the RA pattern. I've trained ("manually", that is not through PemPRO) and turned on PEC.

What happens now is that I get some DEC spikes. THey all seem to
1. go in the same direction. Direction shifts after meridian flip. However, I'm not sure how that is represented in the graph - is "guiding North" thus the opposite direction for the mount after meridian flip? If so, the "side" of pulses are consistent in terms of the mount.

 

‘Guide North’ and ‘Guide East’ describe the direction of the guide pulses that were sent to the mount.  They don’t have any fixed relationship to sky locations or directions relative to the ground.  Most mounts don’t change the direction the Dec motor will turn because of a meridian flip.  So a ‘north’ command will often mean ‘rotate the Dec axis counter-clockwise as viewed from the top of the mount’ regardless of side-of-pier.  I think the Losmandy behaves that way but some other mounts do not.  


2. be triggered by a pulse.

I take this to be the effect of backlash compensation. How do I understand this? At times backlash compensation works nicely, and then suddenly, there is way too much....? In the end, as seen in the log, I turned backlash comp off, and then changed to guide only north. And then no more spikes. But no other backlash problems either.

So, if it works nicely without backlash comp, how come PHD2 insists on a backlash compensation of up to more than 1000, when turned on?

Practically, I guess this indicates that I should turn it off. But I'd like to understand it as well :)

 

First off, your overall guiding seems quite good – you should have had nicely round stars except for the few Dec excursions.  Second, there’s pretty good evidence that the seeing degraded a bit after you did the meridian flip.  The Dec spikes I see in the second session look like they were triggered by a too-small setting of min-move.  You were getting more motion in Dec just because of seeing effects and some of these relatively small moves triggered guide pulses and some of those triggered backlash comp pulses.  Those big corrections are going to be wrong because it was a random seeing event that caused the apparent move, not an error in how the mount was tracking.  If you had increased the min-move value up higher, for example to 0.25, you would have largely avoided these issues.  During the first session, the random movements due to seeing were smaller and didn’t trigger the apparent direction reversals.  If you’re going to use an aggressive approach like backlash compensation, you’ll have to keep an eye on things and be sure you aren’t chasing seeing in Dec.  

 

Personally, I think less is better with guiding.  If you get consistently good results without backlash compensation, then leave it off.  Unless the RA and Dec guiding numbers stay fairly close together, you’re not gaining much by improving one axis without also improving the other.

 

Hope this helps,

Bruce


Interestingly, as seen by the two guiding sessions, guiding RMS was some 15 % worse after meridian flip (the chaotic end of first session was caused by reaching the limit, and I executed a meridian flip, repostioned and restarted guiding.

Any ideas warmly welcome!

Magnus

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Magnus Larsson

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Dec 5, 2017, 1:19:50 PM12/5/17
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Hi Bruce,

Thanks, yes, it is very helpful. But ...:) if you have the time and energy, I still have a few questions - more aiming towards me understanding than improving guding, for the moment.

Guide North and Guide South: so, when the spikes change direction after a meridian flip - it means that they also have changed direction "on the mount"? That is, if the spikes earlier was in the clockwise direction, they are now in the counter-clockwise? I'm thinking: if they are in the direction, say, away from the side that is slightly heavier (if not perfectly balanced) that direction would change on the meridian flip, right? So that they STILL are in the same direction, seen from the perspective of balance?

Which would indicate that spikes depend on how the tooths are "aligned"...right? If not balanced, we would expect backlash only in one direction, right? Or am I messing it up?

Secondly, on the pulse that trigger the spikes, I follow you in that the seeing maybe deteriorated (although it coincided with my  meridian flip...hrm). But: evenif I have a too low min motion (I get that), most pulses do not trigger a spike, but a few does. Should I understand that as spikes occuring when there for some reason is no backlash at that moment (for instance becuase of improper balance) - or what is happening here?

And perhaps most centrally:
If it now works nicely without backlash compensation - how come PHD2 insists on setting a rather high value, when I have it turned on? Should it not instead gradually become lower and lower....?

I'm thinking that next clear night, I'll use the Guiding Assistant many times, to get a precise handle of the measured backlash at different times. Typically it is reported by GA to be some 40-70 px. Anything else you would advice me to do to understand this better?

Magnus

Brian Valente

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Dec 5, 2017, 1:23:17 PM12/5/17
to Magnus Larsson, Open PHD Guiding

I have found it automatically adjusts the amount more and less depending on what it sees. The amount of backlash in your mount does not go down, so PHD does not gradually remove it, instead it adjusts to what is required.

 

 

 

Thanks

 

Brian

 

 

Brian Valente

Brianvalentephotography.com

bw_msgboard

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Dec 5, 2017, 6:19:38 PM12/5/17
to Magnus Larsson, Open PHD Guiding

See below.

 


From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com [mailto:open-phd...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Magnus Larsson
Sent: Tuesday, December 05, 2017 10:20 AM
To: Open PHD Guiding
Subject: Re: [open-phd-guiding] Re: Help with another DEC pattern

 

Hi Bruce,


Thanks, yes, it is very helpful. But ...:) if you have the time and energy, I still have a few questions - more aiming towards me understanding than improving guding, for the moment.

Guide North and Guide South: so, when the spikes change direction after a meridian flip - it means that they also have changed direction "on the mount"? That is, if the spikes earlier was in the clockwise direction, they are now in the counter-clockwise? I'm thinking: if they are in the direction, say, away from the side that is slightly heavier (if not perfectly balanced) that direction would change on the meridian flip, right? So that they STILL are in the same direction, seen from the perspective of balance?

 

I think we’re having trouble communicating here – it’s hard to describe in words.  I think it would be easier for you to just play with the telescope/mount and see for yourself how it works.  Set up on the west side of the pier and push the ‘North’ button on the hand-controller – see how the Dec axis moves.  Let’s say it moves counter-clockwise when you’re looking down the Dec shaft toward the counterweights.  Now move the scope to the east side of the pier and again push the ‘North’ button.  Does the axis continue to move counter-clockwise?  With the Losmandy mount, I think it will stay the same regardless of side-of-pier.  So when PHD2 issues a ‘north’ guide pulse, that’s the direction the Dec axis will move.  Depending on where in the sky you’re pointing will determine whether the nose of the scope moves closer to the ground or further away.


Which would indicate that spikes depend on how the tooths are "aligned"...right? If not balanced, we would expect backlash only in one direction, right? Or am I messing it up?

 

Simple backlash is caused by looseness in the mesh of the drive gears.  Some amount of looseness is required so the gears don’t bind and the axis is allowed to reverse direction at all.  That means there will be a very small delay in getting the gears re-meshed in the opposite direction when the direction of movement switches.  If the delay is on the order of a few hundred milliseconds it in unlikely to have a noticeable effect on guiding.  Once it gets up above 1 second it can become more of an issue.  Some mounts can take up to 10-15 seconds.  If simple, small backlash is the only imperfection, PHD2 backlash compensation can work pretty well.  But there can be other complications.  For example, the amount of backlash might be different when going from north to south vs south to north – perhaps because of a serious imbalance.  In that case, the “correct” amount of compensation will keep changing depending on the direction of reversal.  Other times, there can be some form of stiction or resistance in the system that may depend on the gravitational load applied to the gears.  That is much more difficult because it can create over-shoots and dependence on the scope’s pointing position.  These kinds of problems probably won’t be handled well by backlash compensation or at least not always handled well.


Secondly, on the pulse that trigger the spikes, I follow you in that the seeing maybe deteriorated (although it coincided with my  meridian flip...hrm). But: evenif I have a too low min motion (I get that), most pulses do not trigger a spike, but a few does. Should I understand that as spikes occuring when there for some reason is no backlash at that moment (for instance becuase of improper balance) - or what is happening here?

 

The simple premise behind PHD2’s backlash compensation is to issue pulses that will keep the Dec gear system fully meshed in one direction or the other.  But guiding is a statistical process, hampered by all sorts of random behaviors – both mechanical and seeing-induced.  If the gear train gets into a state where it is “floating” – not engaged in either direction – the next backlash compensation pulse will probably create an over-shoot.   


And perhaps most centrally:
If it now works nicely without backlash compensation - how come PHD2 insists on setting a rather high value, when I have it turned on? Should it not instead gradually become lower and lower....?

 

The backlash compensation is automatically adjusted upward or downward depending on the recent history.  Maybe your mount is showing some kind of asymmetry in how the backlash behaves so that there isn’t convergence on a single best estimate for compensation.  Since you’re interested in all the details, here’s what I suggest.  Open the debug log file associated with your guiding sessions and do a text-search on BLC.  Each entry will show you exactly what was done with backlash compensation and how the amount was adjusted (if it needed adjustment).

 

Bruce

Magnus Larsson

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Dec 6, 2017, 2:14:31 AM12/6/17
to bw_m...@earthlink.net, Magnus Larsson, Open PHD Guiding

Hi!

Brilliant!! Thanks a lot!!

Magnus

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