Bruce...
Thanks for your quick and thorough reply.
I am in Chile (Southern Hemisphere), site coords are -22 degrees south latitude, -68 degrees west latitude), I traveled here from Colorado for a week+ of imaging from the gloriously dark and clear skies of San Pedro de Atacama. I had two completely successful imaging nights on 15Mar and 16Mar, with the same equipment set-up.
Let me give you the sequence of events last night..
.. I started the session at dark (~0850CDT), planning to image a 4-tile mosaic of the Southern Cross, when it was at about 24 degrees above the horizon at the start of the sequence (the telescope was on the west side of the pier, pointing SE at the target).
. I came back outside at 23:15 to watch the swap from Tile#1 to Tile#2. The sequence was capturing frame #42, so I changed the number of frames on that tile to 42 (from 45), so I didn't have to sit outside and watch 3 more frames. Between 23:15 and 23:20, the mount moved to Tile#2, plate solved, PHD2 calibrated, and the EAF ran. Tile#2 started at 23:20.
I came outside for the meridian flip at 02:45 (I've never been able to have PHD2 restart successfully after a meridian flip, so I always go out and do it "by hand" (disconnect the equipment from SGP, close down PHD2, recycle power on the mount, then reconnect and restart the sequence)) That was when I discovered that the sequence had aborted (the last 3-minute subframe captured was at 00:42). I noticed the "ASCOM Camera2_2 disconnected" error in PHD2. All the cabling seemed secure without any snags. For good measure, I disconnected and reconnected (at the camera) the AG cable. (I recently switched to an ASI120MM AG camera from the Orion SSAG Pro that I was having issues with - I always had to disconnect/reconnect the cable to the Orion SSAG Pro at the flip). Everything started back up again correctly - plate solve, AG calibration, EAF - now with the telescope on the east side of the pier, pointing SW at the target.
After I restarted the sequence after the meridian flip, I came back out at various points throughout the night because I was a little spooked by the random sequence abort (on frame #26/45 of Tile #2). At 0430, I came out watched the switch from Tile #3 to Tile#4 - everything went fine. Although, strangely on the plate solver, it was showing the imaging camera angle at 270degrees (vs. 90 degrees on the plan and the earlier plate solves)...but resolved just fine and started Tile #4 at 05:09. I ended the sequence at 06:42, about partway through astronomical twilight.
The data I collected stacked well...but I would like to not lose any of the precious dark skies time during the rest of the nights that I'm here!
On your comment on the calibration setting...I've always done it that way - I do not have a permanent observatory setup. When home, I either image from my front patio (rolling the telescope outside on a trolly and setting it up anew each time or we go camping in dark skies locations, where I set up at the campsite. Here, I transported my equipment from the states and set it up at the Atacama Lodge for the week. Given that, do you recommend a calibration at the beginning of each night's imaging, then no more after that throughout the night? If so, where do I change those settings?
The attached picture is my set-up here at the SPACE Atacama Lodge... My website's blog has entries with pictures from the front patio and out dispersed camping locations - if you're at all interested (
www.beersastrophotography.com)
Thanks so much for your help and quick response.
Suzanne