Quote:
Originally Posted by Striker
Also a question for users of CCDSOFT...once you do guiding calibration and continue to use the same guide camera/scope combination and image on the same side of the meridian...do you calibrate every time you boot the program or does it keep the same calibration even the next day.
I have been calibrating every day I use it.
Any help is much appreciated.
Tony
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Hi Tony
From Page 142 of my CCDSoft Manual, Version 5 Rev 10:
"If you move a large distance across the sky, or if you cross the meridian, then you may want to do another calibration. If you are imaging at longer focal lengths (2500mm and larger), you can calibrate before every image if necessary to get the best possible modeling of your system".
and from Page 143:
"
Recalibration
When should you recalibrate? The simplest way to tell is to start an autoguiding session and observe what happens. Since you can autoguide without taking an image, you can start autoguiding when the telescope moves to a new position. Observe what happens to the X error and Y error numbers. If the both stay within +/- 1.0 pixel, you will likely have good results. If both stay within +/- 0.5 pixel, then the seeing is very good, and you should get excellent results. If one or both shows values greater than +/-1.0, either the seeing is poor, or you need to recalibrate for the new position. The need to recalibrate varies greatly from mount to mount, and only experience will show you what works best for your particular mount".
With my ST7E I used to recalibrate every time I slewed more than approx 30 deg to a new object. I set up and tear down my entire system each session so maybe with a permanent set up, if the guide errors stay within +/- 1.0 pixel from evening to evening, then it appears you do not have to re-calibrate - what a blessing!
Cheers
Dennis