Quote:
Originally Posted by strongmanmike
Funnily enough I have rarely been aware of any issues with piggyback guiding. Whether with my 600mm FL ED80, 1500mm+ FL 12" LX200GPS (fork mounted!) or the 1140mm FL AP on the laser guided NJP  I have done nothing but piggyback guiding. Of course I have rarely gone over 10min exposures so perhaps at 2000mm+ FL and over 10min exposures there may indeed be an issue with differential flexure but still, I think self guide is waaaaaay overated. The vast majority of high end users don't self guide anyway for exactly the reasons you are finding. I use a rather sensitive SXV-h9 which has a good sized chip for guiding (9mm X 6.7mm) and I have NEVER had to move the guide scope to find a guide star..?
Have you tried piggyback guiding?
Mike
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Hi Mike
I’ve tried a side-by-side set up and that is where I seem to hit a few problems in stellar elongation as well as field rotation.
I used a solid, 6mm thick aluminium plate as the side-by-side mounting plate, with a WO Losmandy Style saddle and plate and some WO guide rings bolted directly onto the plate. The guide scope is a WO 66mm F7 Petval and I use an (old model) Orion Star Shoot Deep Space (cooled) CCD with PHD guiding and PHD reports guide star adjustments of the order that “shouldn’t” show up as trails in the imaging set up.
As soon as I poke my head above around 1400mm and 3 minutes, bang, I get star elongation. I confess to not having logged and analysed any guiding data yet, as I’ve focused on the mechanical rigidity and balance issues first. I guess my main failing in this process has been to step back and analyse the data to see if that can suggest a cause, or two!
When I fit then strip the side-by-side paraphernalia down and just fit the OTA on the mount (EM200) and fit the ST7 (765x510) directly to the OTA, the elongation vanishes? I can go as long as 30 mins (best so far), at 1400mm with no trails and no field rotation. In fact when the image downloads, I often have to check that it did so, as there is no discernible movement between successive frames. Or at least if there is, it’s at a sub-pixel level?
Over the last couple of (frustrating) years, I’ve gradually removed some of the contributing factors by using heavier hardware, better tying and managing cable runs, balancing around both axes, having the mount slightly heavy against the RA drive, tweaking guide settings in the software, adjusting the worm on the
EM200 with a wooden mallet, etc. and whilst this has almost removed any trailing when using the ST7 in dual chip auto guide mode, I just haven’t had the same success with the side-by-side arrangement.
I could try mounting the guide scope on the C9.25 as I have the ADM rings and mounting rail, but on the Mewlon 180 I’d have to purchase a set of OTA rings to do the same.
Like you, having to set up and tear down each night isn’t much fun, so I’ve shied away from long fl DSO stuff until I got my second wind, recently.
I really need to log some data and understand the source and magnitude of the errors so I can better remove them, rather than thrashing around as I have been doing. Better still, a permanent set up eh!
Cheers
Dennis