Hi
Hands on with an OAG and 120mm:
- Dismantle, re-grease and adjust the mount that it is nothing
less than mechanically perfect.
- Make a new profile for the oag using bin2 (although bat only
610mm, you may get away with bin1)
- Turn off fast re-centre.
- Allow tracking to settle; track for 5 minutes or so before
calibration
- Increase the size of the box so as to not lose the star during calibration.
- Use PPEC for RA, (or multistar GPG with EKOS' internal guider).
HTH
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This is really a mess, but the problem isn’t being caused by the PHD2 calibration routine. To start, you evidently didn’t run the new-profile-wizard to create a new profile for your OAG setup. You must do that – trying to take the cowboy approach by just changing a few of the parameters you can think of is a bad idea. So start over with a new profile. That said, the problem is likely to remain because the gear seems to be behaving badly. So here are some basic things that need to be figured out:
1. Make sure you don’t have *any* backlash compensation enabled in the mount. That will be a recipe for disaster, and it would explain the behavior you see when the guide star zooms too far to the east.
2. Figure out why your mount is reporting nonsense values for pointing position. PHD2 is being told that its pointing altitude is -27 degrees with an hour angle of nearly 12 hours – I assume you weren’t pointing at the ground. Are you sure the mount is correctly initialized? Is it in some kind of counterweights-up position? Are the time/date/time zone values all correct?
3. Discontinue use of any imaging or automation apps while you’re trying to get a calibration – everything must be done manually at this point.
4. If you sort out the first two points and still have the problem, you can turn off the fast re-center option. That feature is only there as a way to speed up the calibration process but there is no way it can create problems on a properly working mount. But you can disable the function and see what happens. Don’t start fooling around with guiding parameters like Max RA Duration – those have nothing to do with your problem and will only create new problems if you get past the calibration failures. If disabling fast re-center sidesteps your problem, that’s ok but it will point toward a problem in the driver or the mount itself that may bite you down the road.
5. Before you start the calibration, clear the Dec backlash manually, using the hand-controller to move the mount *north* until you see the stars in the image window start to move.
If the calibration still fails, use the Manual Guide Tool and the Star-Cross test tool to manually emulate what is done during calibration. This will generally expose underlying mechanical problems. Those tools are described in the trouble-shooting section of the PHD2 manual.
Hope you can track it down,
Bruce
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what might be going on mechanically with my mount
Hi
Hands on: You mentioned that RA does not revolve freely. At
balance, a tiny touch with your little finger should cause the
-either- axis to rotate easily. It looks like RA is sticking.
Usually this is the cone bearing at the south end of RA which is
over-tightened, especially ex-factory. The procedure to adjust RA
is outlined here.
Other stuff: EQ5s respond well to EKOS' GPG for RA. Maybe I've misunderstood that guiding is working with the EKOS Internal Guider, but not with PHD2 (?). If so, then that narrows it down to a PHD2 setting, but my money would always be on the mount mechanics. There's only a certain amount software can do;)
FWIW, GPG is EKOS' implementation of predictive periodic error correction. It is not just for RA only mounts. The advantage you have is that you can take the default EKOS guider settings and compare the guiding with PHD2. It is a good way to isolate software issues. If it works OK with one... etc.
Cheers and HTH
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