
Hi Tom. Thanks for providing the specifics about the issue you’re dealing with. I agree with you that this doesn’t look like simple backlash and it’s definitely correlated with large guiding displacements resulting from dithering. It happens in both Dec guiding directions but not on a consistent basis. I can see 3 or 4 consecutive large dithers in both Dec directions that recover very quickly – and then there will be one or two that take a minute to recover. Here’s just one example:

Dithering is happening in both directions and only the single event in the center results in the long recovery time. I really think this is a mechanical problem but I can’t guess at a cause. Since these things happen sequentially at the same pointing position, the Dec axis isn’t moving much so the gear orientation should stay pretty consistent. I do think you’d be better off running with higher guide speeds on both axes because those improve the ability to push through small amounts of static resistance on the axis and to more quickly clear any Dec backlash. Obviously, you have to be sure the Dec axis is well balanced and there is no possibility that the guiding assembly can move around or be affected by dragging cables. Have you looked at the various backlash test graphs to see if they provide any insight into how the Dec axis responds to aggressive guide pulses?
For what it’s worth, your overall guiding is quite good and these slow recovery times shouldn’t cause you much trouble if you relax your settling requirements a bit. As it is, these events result in settling timeouts and it’s likely your imaging app is starting the next exposure before things have stabilized. If you see that these events are causing you to discard images, I think it would be easiest to just revise the settling requirements. But you’ll have to work through the trade-offs between lost images and more time spent dithering and settling during the imaging session. You could also think about whether you need to dither so often – unless you’re using an imaging camera with substantial fixed pattern noise, it may not be necessary to dither so often.
Sorry I can’t be of more help on this one,
Bruce
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