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Old 19-12-2014, 03:14 PM
raymo
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Tracking problems

Can anyone help? I have been happily doing subs up to 100-120 secs
with my 8" f/5 Newt for ages. Of recent times I have been aligning using
Sirius and Fomalhaut. All good anywhere in the sky. The last two sessions
I have used different stars [Rigel and Achenar], and my tracking has gone all weird. I got round stars on the Rosette at 60 secs, so thought my tracking was poor, but acceptable for what I was planning for the session, but on the LMC could only get round stars up to 15 secs. Went back to the Rosette and got 60 secs again, but even 60 secs is way short of normal. I have a little out of balance to keep the gears meshed. It didn't
matter how many subs I took; the very poor tracking stayed the same.
I'm not even sure that the poor tracking has anything to do with the alignment process, but I can't think of anything else that has changed.
raymo
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Old 19-12-2014, 03:44 PM
glend (Glen)
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What time of night was this ? How close to the meridian was the LMC? Tracking around the SCP can be problematic, and given you got longer subs going back to the east tends to point to that. I was imaging last night and used Canopus and Achenar on either side of the meridian both of which were at around 55 degrees of Alt at the time of alignment around 11pm on the east coast. Did you leave some weight on ths RA axis when balancing?

Last edited by glend; 19-12-2014 at 03:57 PM.
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Old 19-12-2014, 06:24 PM
raymo
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Thanks for the reply Glend. I always have a little weight working against
the drive. It was about 9pm W.A. time [midnight eastern time], and
Canopus was about 20 deg east of the meridian. I have used Canopus
and Achenar before, and will try them tonight. I neglected to mention that last night I was using my little 80mm f/5 ref, so tracking was more than doubly horrendous.
raymo
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Old 20-12-2014, 03:51 AM
raymo
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Well, tonight was even worse. I tried 4 different pairs of stars over a period of nearly 3 hrs, and when below 1 deg of error I would get nonsensical readouts, and the scope would miss the next star by 10
or 11 degrees. On the fifth pair, [Rigel and Canopus], I eventually got down to less than a minute of error on both axes, but the best tracking
I got with my 80mm f/5 refractor was 20 secs on M42, and barely 15
on NGC 2070. I normally get around 200 secs with this scope. I have
no idea what is going on. If this carries on I might give up imaging, and
get the trusty 10" Dob out.
raymo
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Old 20-12-2014, 06:35 AM
glend (Glen)
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Raymo what version of Synscan software are you running on your handset? And have you upgraded that from what has worked previously? There have been some recent threads dealing with errors alignment in V3.35? When you say nonsensical readouts what does that mean exactly, do you have an example?

Secondly, what happens if you test it with the 8" newt? I am thinking that the 80mm might be too light to properly load the drive (and push the tripod down on its points), and keep slop out of the alignment. Has anything changed in your mount set up like tripod placement? I know my NEQ6 needs to be pushed down to get the leg spread right before I put on the spreader, Just trying to think of possble causes.

That 80mm refractor will be much lighter than the newt and you will probably have had to extend the tripod legs to get the EP height up for the refractor; so if you have extended the tripod legs significantly it won't be as stable, expecially if you have less weight on the mount. Did you extend the legs? Are the clamps tight? Do you have a weight you can attach to the centre lock bolt to pull the tripod down on its stops? Check the tripod first I think, as it's all about that base.

Last edited by glend; 20-12-2014 at 07:47 AM.
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Old 20-12-2014, 08:41 AM
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If it has suddenly gone awry, I'd suspect the power supply connection.
I have a friend with an heq5 who cant get decent tracking.
He uses a mains transformer and I suspect it is that.
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Old 20-12-2014, 01:27 PM
raymo
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Thank you for your replies Glen and Jen, [I'm a poet and didn't know it].
Firstly Glen, I have been running 3.35 successfully since not long after it came out. A typical nonsensical readout would be for instance, after an iteration I would have a readout of say Mel + 1' 48" and Maz + 2' 20", and after the tiny adjustment was made, the next readout might be
Mel - 59' 10" and Maz - 1deg 10" 20". The 8" Newt is my last option which I shall try on the next clear night. The R.A. axis is a little stiff on my HEQ5, and I think you might have hit the nail on the head when you say maybe the 80mm is too light. I have tracked successfully with it
before though, some 6 months ago. I don't extend the legs; I sit on a low stool. The tracking error is continuous and steady in one direction, which
suggests to me that an unsteady platform is not the cause. I've had occasional hiccups before, but never had the scope miss it's next
alignment star by 10 degrees +.
Jen, I don't think my power source is the problem. I use a car battery
to power the mount, and 240v to power my laptop, and the camera
[through it's 12v adaptor]. The car battery always has sufficient power, as I have a 2 amp charger connected to it during my sessions. The car battery setup has served me well for over 50 years of viewing and
film imaging.
raymo
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Old 20-12-2014, 01:57 PM
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jenchris (Jennifer)
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Right, put a tick against that, I suppose it wouldn't be the connection at the mount?
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Old 20-12-2014, 03:39 PM
glend (Glen)
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Hmm, so its an HEQ, now I am not so worried about the weight. Jakob runs an 80mm refractor on his HEQ and doesn't seem to have any problems but he is autoguiding on his targets but seems to find them ok after alignment.

What if you do a two star alignment and then go back to your first alignment star after it says alignment successful - does that first star appear exactly in the centre of the field of view? If yes I would then slew to a nearby target and see if you can track, then move say 90 degrees further and see how it goes. I am suggesting trying to determine where the errors start.

BTW are you using PAE on your tracking target to correct for that sky zone?
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Old 20-12-2014, 04:11 PM
raymo
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Yes it's an HEQ5 Pro GoTo. I have always been able to track for around
100-110 secs anywhere in the sky, provided I have taken the time to get the error down to less than about 30", so I've never found the need to use PAE. My tracking now is appalling everywhere in the sky; 15-20 secs
max. with the 80mm, should be around 200-240 secs. One thing that intrigues me greatly, is when I am getting to the final tiny adjustments,
one of the two stars I'm using will be close to the square in the reticle EP,
but when I move to the other one, it is outside of the reticle EP's F.O.V.
altogether. I have also noticed that the go to accuracy varies significantly
regardless of how well I do the P.A. Last night it was Canopus and Rigel.
Canopus got closer to the square with each iteration, as it should, but
even when the error readout was down to around a minute or two, Rigel
stayed outside the F.O.V. each time I moved to it. It is so weird.
raymo
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Old 20-12-2014, 04:28 PM
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Larryp (Laurie)
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Raymo, have you actually checked the condition of your battery even though you have a charger constantly connected? If the battery is not in good condition, you can still have problems.
The Synscan system seems to need a very healthy power supply to work properly.
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Old 20-12-2014, 05:13 PM
raymo
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Thanks Laurie, I'll check it out with a load tester. That reminds me of my daughter's car which had extremely high mileage on it, and the mechanic
suggested she get rid of it, because one cylinder was about shot, and was causing it to misfire. We bought it from her as a runabout town. A couple of months later the battery failed. New battery, no misfire. The battery had been making and breaking.
raymo
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Old 20-12-2014, 05:22 PM
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Merlin66 (Ken)
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Raymo,
The tracking accuracy doesn't have much to do with the GOTO accuracy...
A good PA and balance, (and power supply!) usually fix things.
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Old 20-12-2014, 06:02 PM
raymo
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Yes I realise that the two are not really connected, but I just seem to have problems with both at the same time. I'll have to take a look at the drive gears. I don't recall whether the drive shafts have flats on them.
Million to one shot, but maybe the drive gear is slipping on the shaft.
raymo
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Old 28-12-2014, 11:51 AM
raymo
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Last night I was able to get round stars at 90 secs, and could have probably got longer, on NGC 2070, but as soon as I went across to
try and get some more subs of M78 I was down to a max of 8 seconds, no matter whether I balanced the tube neutral, against the drive, or
with the drive. Weird!!!!!!
raymo
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Old 28-12-2014, 03:18 PM
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Camelopardalis (Dunk)
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You're not along raymo! Me and my EQ6 have a love-hate relationship, regardless of Synscan version. The past 6 months I've been using the same scope/camera setup and despite my best efforts, the lengths of subs I can take varies wildly from one New Moon to the next...3 months ago I fluked 5 minute subs, this month I could only manage 2, and I even had to throw a bunch of those away. In the summer heat, my uncooled camera can't stand the longer subs anyhow

I've resigned myself to having to drift align. It's time consuming, but the better results I've got seem less related to the polar alignment routine and more on the attention to drift in my subject area. Once give gone through a couple of iterations of the Synscan polar alignment, I align the camera so that motion of RA and Dec follows the horizontal and vertical grid pattern on the camera live view. I'll then start taking subs of about a minute and then make an adjustment in one axis, take another sub, see if the trailing gets better or worse, then continue/counter it until the trailing is minimised. Increase the sub length gradually and adjust and repeat. Then work on the other axis. It's a bit tedious, and might take an hour or two, but I've had such varied experiences with the polar routine I'd rather just trust my eyes. It's not a proper drift alignment, but it seems to work more reliably.

Sorry I don't have any pearls of wisdom to help your specific problem, but I use a small scope with camera of no more than 3.5kg on the EQ6 and balancing isn't a problem, so it shouldn't matter how little your scope weighs you should be able to get it just a tiny bit out of balance to keep the gears meshed. It should be possible, but I understand and share your frustration!
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Old 28-12-2014, 04:13 PM
raymo
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Thanks for the response Dunk. I get varying sub lengths too, but this is
ridiculous. I checked last night's efforts closely, and got round stars up to
65 secs when on NGC 2070, but on M78 across the other side of the
meridian I got 8 secs. 65 secs is appalling, but 8 secs is almost unbelievable. I'm out of ideas.
raymo
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Old 28-12-2014, 06:16 PM
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Btw, I tend to use 3-star align because I'm fairly certain the puck of the mount doesn't hold my scope square with the axes, but maybe that's my undoing too

There seems to be an art to the alignment star choosing, but I usually aim for 3 stars in a wonky triangle...so 90-120 degrees apart and with at least a 30 degree difference in Dec between the first two. It's not always easy, at least for a northerner, to identify some of the stars the handset suggests.
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Old 28-12-2014, 06:56 PM
raymo
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Yes, I'll have to try some different stars too. My problem is that I generally use the same few stars, and have never had significant
tracking problems before.
raymo
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Old 29-12-2014, 02:50 AM
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Just out of curiosity, which way does the star elongation go, RA, Dec, or both? And whichever way it goes, is it consistent?

Cheers
Steffen.
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