Hi Alvaro. I think you already know what’s going on – the camera is not downloading an image in the expected time. You can change the timeout interval on the ‘Camera’ tab of the advanced settings dialog. The default setting is 5 seconds. That means PHD2 starts the exposure, waits for the exposure time you have specified, and then waits for up to another 5 seconds to get the image. You can try increasing this number to see if it helps. Normally, this problem is caused by a problem in the USB subsystem - often a USB cable - or sometimes a problem in the camera itself. The only reason we have the timeout logic is to alert you of a problem with the camera – in the past, this would have resulted in a “hang” of the application.
Good luck.
Bruce
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It’s a mixed bag and depends on how the vendor has implemented the driver. Some of them are redistributed with the PHD2 release and will reside in the same directory as phd2.exe. But this isn’t true in a variety of cases, for example when the camera uses an ASCOM or video-standard interface or when the vendor has some other mechanism for the system to locate its driver. And that assumes you’re running Windows, I have no idea what happens on the Mac or Unix platforms. That said, I haven’t done a camera driver interface in PHD2, so Andy or someone else will have to correct me if I’m wrong…
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I have seen some discussion on other forums indicating the QHY5 family of cameras can be very consumptive of USB resources, especially at high frame rates. If your failures are so intermittent, perhaps they’re caused by contention with another device on the USB subsystem. Just a thought…
From: open-phd...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:open-phd...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of alvaro cruz-cabrera
Sent: Sunday, April 19, 2015 3:34
PM
To:
open-phd...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: QHY5L-ii -
"camera timeout during capture"
Bruce,
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I have to agree with and support what Bruce stated. Its not a PHD problem and its not uncommon with the QHY guide cameras. For some reason the exposures take longer than requested and sometimes do not terminate. The problem appears to be related to the camera cable not being plugged firmly into both the usb port and camera. Try re plugging the cable or use another usb port.. I have the PHD2 source and put some timing stats in the PHD2 code for my QHY5L-II. The round trip time to get an image for a 1 second exposure is typically 1.28 seconds but I have seen this blow out to 3 or 4 seconds for no apparent reason.
Wow, this is good information for us to have. We’re usually flying blind with these sorts of problems because we typically don’t have the camera in question. Thanks a lot for the post.
Bruce
From: Rob
Cormack [mailto:kar...@bigpond.com]
Sent: Monday, April 20, 2015 2:12
AM
To:
open-phd...@googlegroups.com
Cc: aacc...@gmail.com; bw_m...@earthlink.net
Subject: Re: QHY5L-ii -
"camera timeout during capture"
I have to agree with and support what Bruce stated. Its not a PHD problem and its not uncommon with the QHY guide cameras. For some reason the exposures take longer than requested and sometimes do not terminate. The problem appears to be related to the camera cable not being plugged firmly into both the usb port and camera. Try re plugging the cable or use another usb port.. I have the PHD2 source and put some timing stats in the PHD2 code for my QHY5L-II. The round trip time to get an image for a 1 second exposure is typically 1.28 seconds but I have seen this blow out to 3 or 4 seconds for no apparent reason.
Rob
Hello, and continuing with this problem fix:
I started noticing that my guiding was failing (maybe it has been
failing for while and I had not notice it). The cause: the guiding
camera (QHY5L-II) disconnects from PHD2. After switching around: ports, USB cables, drivers and PHD versions.
I found out that if:
-I connect my ASI120 MC to PHD2 in that laptop, there is no disconnect. But the ASI is a bit heavy and cumbersome for my setup to work.
-I connect the QHY5L-II to my desktop (which is a behemont), and it seems to work ok.
Important
note my AP computer is an at least 7 year old DELL Studio, with windows
vista 32 bits, 4GB of memory, and 320 Gb of hard drive, CPU Core 2 Duo.
4 USB ports
My thinking seems to point out that
there is not a good reaction between PHD2, QHY5L, laptop (USB power
settings are optimized for laptop no matter how you tweak them), and
windows Vista.
So, I found that I can get a Dell Inspiron $200, brand new Celeron Dual Core, 4GB Ram, 500GB Hard Drive, and at least 6 USB ports (2 of them I think are USB3). WIndows 8.1.
It
would be a desktop (so I have to move two more pieces: a Screen which
is slightly bigger and a keyboard), that will not have the USB policies
of a laptop, windows 8.1 (better USB management). All the USB ports can
be oriented in the same direction, and I could Isolate the QHY5L-II to
the USB3 ports. And, I have to move the setup to my backyard, so it is
not that bad.
The other option, is to get a better guding camera (lodestar $500, lodestar X2 $600, SBIG $500) and consider the QHY5L as a loss for guiding, so it is about $300 (QHY)+$500(New Camera) = $800
With the new computer the total cost is: $300(QHY)+$200(New Computer)= $500.
Is there another option? BTW: I am using an OAG for guiding, so the camera should be sensitive, that is why I went for the QHY.
Thanks
Alvaro
Well. I have tried some things, and this is what I found:
That leaves me:
-Operating system (Vista, we all suspect it).
-Hardware (computer is 8 years old), and being an 8 year old laptop at the same time.
-Combination of the two
So how easy is to get Windows 7 installed on that computer? or just look for new computer hardware?
Alvaro
Will do and get back to you on.
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I would suggest users just set default to 9999 and be done with it.