You’re correct, what matters is the rotational position of the guide camera relative to the sky. If you want to avoid doing one calibration at the start of the night, you would need to be sure that rotational orientation doesn’t change by more than a few degrees. If in doubt, re-calibrate. Polar alignment doesn’t affect this because you don’t change the orientation of the guide camera with respect to the sky.
Regards
Bruce
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Hi Ar. If you’re talking about registration marks in the drive systems or some kind of “home” position on the mount, that really has nothing to do with the PHD2 calibration. What we’re interested in for calibration is the rotational orientation of the guide camera with respect to the sky – that isn’t going to be affected by anything you do with the mount, it’s a matter of how the guiding assembly is attached.
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I don’t really follow all this but if you’re literally dismantling the mount, I suppose something could affect the axial positioning. Varying PA errors don’t do that. I don’t think it’s worth flogging this though, I probably don’t grasp the full picture. Since you’re willing and able to start the evening session with a fresh calibration, that eliminates the issue entirely and is the most reliable solution.
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