Quote:
Originally Posted by acropolite
Humayun, If you can keep your exposures very short, you may get away without guiding, however if you want to take exposures of any length you will need in addition to a dovetail mounting system you will need an equatorial wedge, APM, Parallel port guiding adapter (shoestring make a suitable adapter), a guide camera (Toucam or LPI) and some guiding software (Guidedog or similar) to do accurate photography. Add to that a counterweight system to take the strain off the LX's gears (Bintel have a budget one at $129). If you check Pete's astronomy site in http://www.users.bigpond.com/lansma/ , you'll get the idea. By the time you have collected all this stuff you'll start to appreciate why people go for equatorial mounts. 
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Hi acropolite,
Cheers for the link.
I would like to take long exposures, not short ones, hence the need for a guidescope and DSI or other CCD camera.
I spoke to someone at Bintel about the counterweight system already.
I guess what I'm wanting to know is if there is an all-in-one mounting system that allows you to mount a guidescope as well as a camera to the OTA.
I guess the other method would be to remove the finderscope, attach a guidescope (Orion 80mm) in its place and then attach the finderscope on top of that. That will allow me to also attach the Meade piggyback system for the camera directly onto the OTA. And then a counterweight system underneath.
Is it possible to polar align without the use of an equatorial wedge? Whilst we're at it, how does one polar align in the southern hemisphere? The LX90 manual has a section in appendix A for polar alignment, but, it is written for the northern hemisphere as it references Polaris as the alignment star. How do we find the south celestial pole?
Sorry for all the questions!
Regards,
Humayun