Hi Andrea. In general, well-made mounts with absolute
encoders don't benefit from aggressive (rapid) guiding and some may actually
suffer from it. You were trying to guide with 1-second exposures and
that's not a good approach with your mount, mostly because you were probably
just chasing seeing effects. Mounts such as yours often produce the best
results with long-cadence guiding, meaning that guide corrections are issued on
intervals of, say, 5 to 10 seconds. The goal is to guide out the
low-frequency errors that arise from polar alignment error, atmospheric
refraction, flexure, etc. There's no need to use rapid guiding because the
encoders should be keeping the mount on track. This guiding cadence is
established by using two parameters: 1) the guide camera exposure time and 2)
the time lapse property. If you use longer exposure times, you will dampen
the effect of seeing variations right away - a good starting point for you would
be 2-3 seconds or so. Then you adjust the time lapse property to create
the final delay between guide corrections: camera exposure time + time lapse
value. If you find that the guide star drifts too much in declination, you
can reduce the time lapse value or improve the polar
alignment.
You've also missed some other important best practices that
will improve your results. First, you should be using multi-star guiding
which means you must allow PHD2 to make its own selection of guide stars - don't
click on a particular star, click on the 'Star' icon to force an
auto-selection. Then, especially when you're getting started, run the
Guiding Assistant to see how the mount is performing on its own and also to get
a recommendation for appropriate min-move values. In addition to the
exposure time setting, the min-move values are your best protection against
chasing seeing. You should also specify a min-HFD value for guide stars to
help PHD2 distinguish between faint stars and camera sensor noise.
All of that said, your guiding wasn't bad, not something to be
too excited about. In the 3.5 hour final session, excluding the problem at
the end where you simply lost the guide star, your total guiding RMS was 0.6
arc-sec with a close match between RA and Dec. So you should be have been
getting nice round stars. It looks to me like this was pretty much
seeing-limited. It's not uncommon, particularly in the summer, to see
substantial changes in the seeing conditions from hour to hour - so you can't
expect results to necessarily remain the same all night or from night to
night. If you follow the recommendations above, I would expect to see your
guiding results improve but of course you will always be limited by the local
seeing conditions.
Regarding your question about the different scales for aggressiveness, that's an inconsistency we should fix in the UI. But it's only a UI problem, in your example the RA was being guided with 70% aggressiveness and the Dec with 80%.
Here are some good reference materials in case you
haven't seen them:
Hope this helps,
Bruce