


"Hello Nick,
Thank you for the logs.
We have reviewed it but there is nothing in there showing a defective mount. The 34.2 second spike you are seeing is due to the design of the pulley system(14 teeth per ~480 second worm cycle). PEC should take care of most of the spike; however we do not guarantee < 1 arc-second performance.
It does looks like tweaking some setting would improve the performance a bit. I would suggest increasing the aggressiveness and trying .5sec exposures. It also looks like you can set the RA axis slightly more east heavy. Doing a new PEC training with more cycles averaged may should also help (you mentioned you did 10 cycles the first time before the repair but not sure on the cycles for the recent one)"
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Reviewing my options, I didn't feel comfortable selling the mount to someone, given the problems I was having. Not knowing how long it would take, or even if I could fix it, I ordered a couple polyurethane drive belts and would install them and start working on the mount when they arrived (took a couple months).
In the meantime, I bought a new EQ6-R Pro mount.
Once I got the belts, I opened up the mount to inspect the RA and Dec motors. I found a great variance between each in the adjustment of the backlash, worm-blocks and belt tension. I replaced the belts, adjusted the backlash on both axes, and using a dial indicator adjusted the worm blocks. I also used a digital caliper to adjust the belts so there was equal deflection on both sides of each belt. Given how it had been adjusted by Celestron, I decided not to go any further and test the mount to see if this improved things.
I set up the tripod using three pavers with a dimple drilled in the center of each for each leg of the tripod. These were set in the gravel of my backyard. A gravel base in the heat of one of hottest deserts in the US isn't the best idea, of course, especially if one is imaging in the summer. Because of the location of the mount in close proximity to a fence on the north side of my backyard, I had to extend the legs of the tripod all the way to gain clearance over the fence to Polar Align. Success! Guiding is now almost always under 1.0" RMS and on really good nights can get down to the 0.6" RMS range. I have been imaging with the mount on the tripod almost every night, all night, for the past 4+ months. I haven't re-checked the Polar Alignment either. I have found most nights the EQ6-R Pro, which is mounted on a pier is usually guiding 0.2" to 0.3" better than the CGX. I would expect better guiding with the CGX if I moved it to the pier.
I don't think replacing the belts solved the problem. It was proper adjustment of backlash, worm blocks and belt tension that solved the problem. All fairly simple.
With the CGX I must use the PHD2 PPEC algorithm and my best guiding is achieved with 1.0 second exposures. My EQ6-R Pro has not been PEC Trained and I guide that mount at 2.5 seconds using the Hysteresis algorithm. For now I am going to keep the CGX. I also DID NOT set up the mount to be east heavy and I get similar guiding on each side of the mount. Note that Celestron recommended 0.5 second exposures, east heavy balance and more aggressive guiding.
Here is a typical FFT RA high frequency graph nowadays. At 34.7sec the amplitude is 0.4" and is marked by the white dot. Without your input I could not have resolved the problem. Thanks, again.

Hi Nick. Thanks for reporting back on this. You’re right, we don’t often hear the outcome for these more complicated problems. It seems to me you’re the one who did all the hard work, that sounds like some significant adjustments you had to do on that drive system. Congrats on getting it done and I hope you continue to enjoy good results on both mounts.
Regards,
Bruce
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/open-phd-guiding/4a91dde1-e61d-4076-8ef0-b3403f00a1ffn%40googlegroups.com.