AstroViking
18-07-2023, 08:18 AM
Hi all,
I had the scope out last night to take advantage of the first clear night in about a month.
My target was IC4628, the "Prawn Nebula" because it's a good Ha target and one that I haven't imaged before.
For the first half, I was seeing a guiding RMS between 1.5 and 2 - all well and good. The guiding graph was pretty much flat, and when I checked the subs the stars were good and round, even in the corners of the image.
The meridian flip went smoothly - Ekos re-aligned with the Prawn, the guiding started up after recalibrating, and then it all went stupid.
Instead of an RMS in the single figures, it was sitting at 30. The stars in the first couple of images were all good and round, so I left it running. When I went back to check, Ekos had aborted the sequence because the guiding RMS was (obviously) well above the threshold.
At this stage I gave up and packed everything away.
It's not the first time I've had this situation, yet other times the flip happens and everything works perfectly afterwards.
So my questions:
- What is causing the insane guiding RMS values, when all that's happened is the meridian flip?
- What can I do to resolve this? (Besides doing a full power-down and restart after the flip?)
Many thanks,
V
I had the scope out last night to take advantage of the first clear night in about a month.
My target was IC4628, the "Prawn Nebula" because it's a good Ha target and one that I haven't imaged before.
For the first half, I was seeing a guiding RMS between 1.5 and 2 - all well and good. The guiding graph was pretty much flat, and when I checked the subs the stars were good and round, even in the corners of the image.
The meridian flip went smoothly - Ekos re-aligned with the Prawn, the guiding started up after recalibrating, and then it all went stupid.
Instead of an RMS in the single figures, it was sitting at 30. The stars in the first couple of images were all good and round, so I left it running. When I went back to check, Ekos had aborted the sequence because the guiding RMS was (obviously) well above the threshold.
At this stage I gave up and packed everything away.
It's not the first time I've had this situation, yet other times the flip happens and everything works perfectly afterwards.
So my questions:
- What is causing the insane guiding RMS values, when all that's happened is the meridian flip?
- What can I do to resolve this? (Besides doing a full power-down and restart after the flip?)
Many thanks,
V