Hi,
I have recently replaced my reliable Celestron AVX with a Sky-Watcher NEQ6, for which I have Rowan belt modified.
Trouble is, the replacement mount refuses to guide reliably, regardless of payload.
More often than not during a guiding session, massive random guiding excursions (traditionally DEC, but lately RA is affected) are experienced. Often PHD2 does not recover the guide star and if left unattended, the imaging session is ruined.
I have stripped, tuned and rebuilt the mount countless times, dialling out backlash, upgrading bearings. regreasing, but to no avail. I see no obvious mechanical issues to speak of. Cables are neatly secured with no snags.
I've created new profiles from the PHD2 wizard, chopped and changed guiding algorithms, guide cam exposure lengths, run guiding assistant over a worm cycle, calibrated near the meridian or at the point of imaging, swapped from EQMOD to GSS, changed guide rates in RA and DEC but found no cure.
I use N.I.N.A. for my imaging plans and dither in random pattern every few frames. The dither distance is set correctly for whichever imaging scope I have mounted, as evidenced by past trouble-free AVX imaging sessions.
Needless to say, my polar alignment is more than adequate and I never experienced any of these issues with my AVX. Sometimes HEAVILY unbalancing Dec to be North or South heavy improves things, but not always.
I can't think of any stone I've left unturned, but during my last imaging session I checked the "Reverse Dec output after meridian flip" and "Assume Dec orthogonal to RA" options out of desperation, and it seemed to settle the excursions for the guiding run, but can't be sure if it's a permanent fix, as it was only a single instance.
For reference, I've included some of my most recent guide logs.
Any suggestions, please as I'm at a loss?
Thanks,
Kevin