Thought this was due a followup post.
On the weekend, Saturday to be exact, the weather was brilliant and i got some good quality time in with the scope.
Sadly my quality time was mared by creepy crawlies. Felt something on my head, put hand up and felt cobwebs... Went inside and checked for spider but couldn't find one. Went back outside and noticed something crawling down my arm, about the size of a two dollar coin... Yep it was a spider. After killing it i noticed a large spider building its web very close to my scope... Sigh spiders.
I am happy to say that i think i have drift alignment down pat. Not perfect, no far from perfect, but i was able to drift align.
I think what was causing me my problems were:
- Mount was not levelled properly.
- Mount altitude was way, way off. (7 degrees or so apparently)
- The digital (android app) compass was showing true north to be south-west. It was actually south-east (10 degrees).
Once i fixed these three things up, i found drift alignment only required a small amount of turning and screwing to get it close.
I bought a normal compass and digital inclonometer with spirit guage, and they helped alot.
Now i am having problems with PHD guiding. Guiding is rough causing blur on long shots and guiding was impossible near the meridian (it said it was guiding... and the star just moves away as if PHD isn't sending the commands to move the mount to the mount) and the poor guiding showed in distant objects when i tried to do more than 1min subs.
I guess this is just a matter of my PHD settings not being agressive enough, although im not sure about guiding near the meridian, that seemed borked to me. Will have to do some more reading.
One last question;
I have uploaded a copy of M42 that i took (it was a jpeg shot, i didn't get raw shots of M42 before it disappeared behind the house). Is this coma/field curviture at the edges of the screen causing the star shape problems and, what looks some sort of ghosting? The stars towards the center of the image look much rounder and sharper so i am not sure if what i am seeing here is poor guiding, poor alignment, or due to lack of coma corrector and or field flattener?
http://i.imgur.com/dQk8L.jpg
-edit-
Turns out the "ghosting" (correct term was probably haloing) was due to bad stacking. Did a 2 point stack in nebulosity and got a better image. Lack of flattener on the edges is noticeable, but there still seems to be some shift, guessing guiding or alignment.
http://i.imgur.com/aC32R.jpg
Thanks for the help everyone has provided so far!