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I have some suggestions to make:
1. Increase your guide cam exposure time to 2 seconds or use auto-exposure.
2. Set the Min-HFD value to 1.2
3. Increase the “short delay” to 2 seconds
4. Decrease the size of the dithers as Brian suggested unless your main camera has a large amount of fixed pattern noise you’re fighting.
I don’t think it will be difficult to get things smoothed out – I think you’re being too aggressive with the guiding and perhaps the dithering.
Bruce
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I agree with Brian, I think you need to wait for a night of good seeing in order to get a better assessment of the results. 1 arc-sec deflections are hardly rare when the seeing isn’t good. The rate of Dec reversals seems too high, which is often the case when the seeing is poor and the Min-Move is too low. I know you ran the GA but that was several hours earlier and necessarily in a different part of the sky from where you spent most of the night imaging. I generally try to get a Min-Move value that results in Dec corrections being issued only 15-20% of the time. In your worst guiding session at 23:30, the guide pulse frequency was much higher than that. I think you were chasing the seeing here.
A good way to judge seeing is to take a few 10-sec exposures, unguided, and measure the FWHM of the stars in the image. That will give you a working estimate for the seeing conditions. I do this as a side-effect of doing automated focus runs. It’s not uncommon in a single night to get results that might range from 1.5 arc-sec to 2.5 arc-sec and the guiding results usually reflect that. Of course, 2.4 arc-sec is hardly the worst it can be, some locations and conditions are much worse. Also, since you were imaging at a high Dec value, you need to be sure the OTA is well-balanced and you might, as you suggested, want to take a close look at the cable routing. Through-the-mount cabling doesn’t give anyone a free pass on these kinds of problems, it just make it harder to find them. <lol>
Regards,
Bruce
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Actually, what I said was “necessarily in a different part of the sky from where you spent most of the night imaging.” <g> I said that in order to avoid this confusion. The most accurate GA results are gotten around Dec = 0 but you have to remember that seeing can depend on the pointing position for various reasons. What you did was fine so long as you remember that the MinMove recommendations relate to a time and place and may need adjustment when conditions change. That’s why it’s good to keep an eye on the Dec guiding activity and perhaps increase the min-move value if the frequency of corrections is high. I think that’s particularly true with configurations like you have.
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