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Hi Guys, well tonight with the great assistance of John G, and a long telephone call I have finally learn't to Auto Guide, and it wasn't a scary :scared: as i thought.
So hopefully in the very near future you will see some of the results.
Just thought i would mention it as i'm pretty excited. :D :D
Leon :thumbsup:
ballaratdragons
01-09-2007, 10:01 PM
:stargaze: :jump: :cool: :party: :cool: :party: :cool: :party: :cool: :party: :2thumbs: :jump2: :jump:
:rockband: :rockband: :rockband: :rockband:
EXCELLENT!!!
WHERE'S THE PICS, LEON??? :lol:
pvelez
01-09-2007, 10:20 PM
Hey Leon - thats great. :thumbsup:
I've been using your old ED80 and a Stellarvue finder to do the same thing.
Now if only I could get put to some clear skies so I can show off what I've learned
Pete
Settle down Ken :lol: the pics will be coming shortly, I only forgot to do one thing, and that was to change the ISO setting on the camera. :doh:
I'm used to short exposures of about 30 Sec's each, so 800 ISO was Ok for that, but when i took some tonight for 3 min's each that setting was to fast and although the stars were nice and round the exposure was over exposed and very light. :whistle:
Should have set it to about 200 or so, Ah well, i'll fix that tomorrow night.
Pete, hope you have success as well, it isn't quite as hard as i thought, and hopefully with some more practice things will be better. ;)
But then I did have a good teacher.
Cheers Leon :thumbsup:
pvelez
01-09-2007, 10:33 PM
Thanks Leon. Have managed to get the mount and lappy to talk - only issue I ad was that the guide rate was too low and PHD made the scope chase the seeing all about.
Next time - when there are no clouds and the moon is away - I'll give it another go.
Pete
Pete it was suggested to me tonight that the guide rate should be 1-1.5 sec's which i found worked for me quite nicely, however i still have lots to learn, but tonight was great.
leon
ballaratdragons
01-09-2007, 10:58 PM
Yep, and if the seeing gets bad, just jump it up to 2 or 3 seconds. Then you aren't chasing dancing stars.
Tamtarn
02-09-2007, 12:03 AM
Well Done Leon :thumbsup::thumbsup:
On your way now to producing even greater images.
Thanks David, that's the plan, only experience and time will yeild the results.
leon
radu5er
02-09-2007, 11:00 AM
Good work Leon...glad to hear there is another expert in the area to call on when I decide to try it. :D
Of course you do realize that now it will cloud up for a few days just to try your patience...
:cloudy:
Your dead right Rick, I am ready to go out tonight, but already the clouds are rolling in, Ah well, that is Astronomy.
Leon
g__day
03-09-2007, 09:57 AM
Well done! I had a positive experience with PHD last night too - doing a 20 minute guided shot of NGC 6093 - and finding the stars are beautifully round!
So to me 20 minutes at 2.3 metre focal length is impressive. Some nights the mount see-saws or yo-yos when PHD drives into over-correct mode ever 3 seconds - some night its spot on - some nights variations kick in by hour 3-4 of imaging - go figure.
I have two hints for you:
1. Tune "minimum pixel's before guide pulse sent". I upped it from its default 0.25 of a pixel to between 0.70 to 1.1 of a pixel and this improved the consistency of my results dramatically.
2. If your mount slews a long, long way - consider re-calibrating PHD - press the brain and tick force calibration. I notice after a few hours PHD can suddenly invert and when it tries to centre a star it actually moves the mount in 180 degrees the wrong direction = whoopsie! Then its time to re-calibrate.
With city glow I can see 20 minutes is really pushing things - but 4 * 8 minute shots combined may give me a much nicer result, its just a pleasure seeing how fine your tracking and PE can be if you finally get everything working well!
Geoff45
10-09-2007, 01:41 PM
Leon, I know just how you feel after I managed to autoguide last night for the first time. Great!
Geoff
Thanks Guys, yep it is magic just to see it working.
Leon
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