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25-05-2013, 08:45 PM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 22,078
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MAXIM DL guide star selection
How do you override MAXIM DL automatic selection for a guide star? I want to select the guide star explicitly but everytime I press start it defaults back to a hot pixel.
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25-05-2013, 09:12 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Wynnum West, Brisbane.
Posts: 4,166
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Just click on the star you want it to use and click start.
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25-05-2013, 09:12 PM
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avandonk
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Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 4,786
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You can select the calibrate star by left clicking when the calibrate thingy is ticked. Press start to calibrate. Then left click on your star of choice while the track thingy is ticked and then hit start!
Bert
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25-05-2013, 09:32 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Sydney
Posts: 18,175
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In CCDsoft that would still fail as the software will automatically chose the brightest pixel in the image thinking it is the guide star. I have seen my autoguider go along nicely and then all of sudden hit 8 to 14 pixel guide errors due to selecting a hot pixel or camera artifact (Lodestar).
The best solution is a dark subtract. With an STi that is done simply by selecting autodark in the imaging menu and it takes a dark at the start and then reuses it continually through the session (it has shutter to be able to do this). It will not use a library dark though so you would have to be using Maxim that allows library darks for autoguiders.
So unless your guide camera is pretty clean and free of artifacts you need an STi or ST402ME or use Maxim.
Greg.
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25-05-2013, 09:33 PM
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PI cult recruiter
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 10,584
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Or use ACP which picks the guide star for Maxim
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25-05-2013, 10:10 PM
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Bust Duster
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Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 4,846
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Yes, just click in on when you do the "expose". You should see the x and y coords change to the star you picked.
I also do as Greg suggested and do a full dark calibration of guide cam even for guiding.
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26-05-2013, 01:33 AM
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Waiting for next electron
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 2,427
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Just make sure it is a single click only, not double. Maxim will then use the star you have chosen to guide.
Mark
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26-05-2013, 08:35 AM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 22,078
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tandum
Just click on the star you want it to use and click start.
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I click the locate radio button in the AO setup window. MAXIM selects a star. I then click another one. Press start in the same window and MAXIM selects his own again.
Quote:
Originally Posted by avandonk
You can select the calibrate star by left clicking when the calibrate thingy is ticked. Press start to calibrate. Then left click on your star of choice while the track thingy is ticked and then hit start!
Bert
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 You've confused the hell out of me there Bert. Calibrate thingy beign the radio button? Yeah I did that. Clicking start always defaults the star back to Maxim's choice.
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
In CCDsoft that would still fail as the software will automatically chose the brightest pixel in the image thinking it is the guide star. I have seen my autoguider go along nicely and then all of sudden hit 8 to 14 pixel guide errors due to selecting a hot pixel or camera artifact (Lodestar).
The best solution is a dark subtract. With an STi that is done simply by selecting autodark in the imaging menu and it takes a dark at the start and then reuses it continually through the session (it has shutter to be able to do this). It will not use a library dark though so you would have to be using Maxim that allows library darks for autoguiders.
So unless your guide camera is pretty clean and free of artifacts you need an STi or ST402ME or use Maxim.
Greg.
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Thanks Greg. I do darks and apply them to the lodestar. Then use full calibration in the camera setup windows.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RickS
Or use ACP which picks the guide star for Maxim 
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Thanks Rick I read a little about ACP. I see that it has a line that disables MAXIM star selection: Camera.GuiderAutoSelectStar = False. Can you tell me the link to the latest version of this script. I'll check it out.
Quote:
Originally Posted by troypiggo
Yes, just click in on when you do the "expose". You should see the x and y coords change to the star you picked.
I also do as Greg suggested and do a full dark calibration of guide cam even for guiding.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marki
Just make sure it is a single click only, not double. Maxim will then use the star you have chosen to guide.
Mark
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Thanks guys. Did that. The star selection in the AO defaults back to MAXIM selection as soon as any start button is clicked.
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26-05-2013, 08:50 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Wynnum West, Brisbane.
Posts: 4,166
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26-05-2013, 09:02 AM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 22,078
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tandum
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Cool - thanks. Yeah that would be an easy fix. TBH I haven't used MAXIM DL in years. I did use the AO once but that was with the SX Lodestar utility. Will do a bit more reading. Looks like it's clear tonight again so I have another shot at it.
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26-05-2013, 10:28 AM
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PI cult recruiter
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 10,584
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Marc,
Is it only during calibration that you Maxim is ignoring your choice of guide star? IIRC, I had the same problem and didn't find a solution. I worked around it with calibration frames so that I didn't have any hot pixels to guide on. Once calibrated I was able to choose a guide star when tracking.
Cheers,
Rick.
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26-05-2013, 11:06 AM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 22,078
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RickS
Marc,
Is it only during calibration that you Maxim is ignoring your choice of guide star? IIRC, I had the same problem and didn't find a solution. I worked around it with calibration frames so that I didn't have any hot pixels to guide on. Once calibrated I was able to choose a guide star when tracking.
Cheers,
Rick.
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Ok, so I've got this right. It's clear tonight so I'll give it another go.
1_ connect lodestar/AO etc...
2_ make a single dark frame then apply full calibration (or can you do a library of darks and combine to make a quality master dark?)
3_ in the AO set up window, click the locate radio button then start.
4_ one click on the star then start?
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26-05-2013, 11:09 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 1,865
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Quote:
Originally Posted by multiweb
Thanks guys. Did that. The star selection in the AO defaults back to MAXIM selection as soon as any start button is clicked.
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I use an SX AO with MaximDL and, like Rick, find the same thing. Clicking on the tracking image will set the tracking star correctly, though. From a user perspective, I'd definitely call it a bug.
I find that a dark library for my guider (Lodestar) is absolutely critical in order to calibrate the drive and AO correctly. In MaximDL's SX AO interface, you have to first set the dark frames in the calibration library, and then manually enable dark subtraction in the Setup pane. I almost tore my hair out in frustration until I figured that out  However, I track without calibration frames (as per the manual's recommendation) and find that it gives me about 2 Hz faster guiding.
Alternatively, I've sometimes found success by slewing to a bright star very close by and using that to calibrate.
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26-05-2013, 11:19 AM
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Mostly harmless...
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 5,735
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Hi Marc
Remember you have full control of the manual parameters in Maxim too. From memory there is a public domain Maxim plug-in that will use plate solving to fill in the cal parameters, and works very well. Might be a way around your problems if AO is complicating things. Once you get a cal you should be able to use over and over.
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26-05-2013, 11:20 AM
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Mostly harmless...
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 5,735
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marki
Just make sure it is a single click only, not double. Maxim will then use the star you have chosen to guide.
Mark
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There's ALWAYS something to learn in this hobby. Will have to check that out.
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26-05-2013, 11:56 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 1,865
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Quote:
Originally Posted by multiweb
Ok, so I've got this right. It's clear tonight so I'll give it another go.
1_ connect lodestar/AO etc...
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Yep...
Quote:
2_ make a single dark frame then apply full calibration (or can you do a library of darks and combine to make a quality master dark?)
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I've just used the Autosave feature and shot a library of darks at various binnings and shutter speeds (0.05, 0.075, 0.1, 0.2 secs are what I usually use). I then go into Set Calibration ( Process menu), auto generate, and replace with masters.
Quote:
3_ in the AO set up window, click the locate radio button then start.
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You need to first go into the Setup tab of the SX AO Control window, and ensure that Full Frame Image is checked in the Full Calibration section.
Once you've done that, click on the Locate radio button. I usually have the Contin. box checked to ensure that the star is reasonably steady first - then click on Abort.
Quote:
4_ one click on the star then start?
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Now click on the Calibrate Drive radio button, and then click Start. It should move the mount and calibrate itself.
You'll also need to do the Calibrate AO step if you haven't already. You need to re-do this if you change your imaging train (e.g. taking the camera out, and then putting it back in) - but not if you slew to a different part of the sky, or on successive nights with the same set up.
Step 5. Click on the Locate radio button again and re-acquire a guide star. (You have to do this before you can start tracking - even though MaximDL knows where the guide star is after the drive calibration step  )
Step 6. Click on the Track tab, and then click on Start. If all went well - you should see the guide star updating in the window and corrections being made.
Good luck! I find MaximDL's normal guiding set up fairly straightforward, but the AO set up is definitely convoluted.
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26-05-2013, 12:03 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 1,865
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One other thing - the SX AO units have a nasty habit of jamming. (In my case - it happens about 50% of the time after running Calibrate AO.) If this happens, you might find that MaximDL freezes for about 5-10 seconds before giving you a vague CCD camera error (3) (or something similar).
At this point, I usually disconnect both cameras from MaximDL, start the SXV-AO Utility, connect to the AO unit, click on Recovery, wait about 5 secs, disconnect from the AO unit (quit the program, or press Select Com Port), reconnect the cameras in MaximDL, and continue with the imaging run.
Sooo frustrating - if it didn't do such a good job when it works, I would have given up (or returned it) long ago.
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26-05-2013, 12:05 PM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 22,078
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Thanks for the detailed post Dave.  I'm going to give it another go tonight again. Once I have it sorted out I'm sure it's just a matter of writing down the steps and following the right procedure. Will start by doing a library of darks as advised. I could see a lot of guide stars available in the lodestar viewport even at 1/20s so it's not the lack of guide stars that were the issue. I guess everything connects as well, so I can't complain too much. Got that far.
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26-05-2013, 12:16 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 1,865
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Aah yes - writing down the steps is a good idea! If I miss out on a month's worth of imaging due to bad weather, I usually come back and forget a critical step
By the way, I just found this very excellent article with step-by-step instructions and screen shots - in retrospect, it would have saved me much frustration:
http://astro.azurewebsites.net/Article/ArticleContent/5
The article reminds me of a couple of things that I forgot below:
* I use 2x2 by default with the Lodestar (SX recommends it in their manual too) - I get fewer image artefacts and faster update rates too.
* Dark frame scaling has never worked well for me on the Lodestar (even with a bias frame library) - so I prefer to take darks at lots of different exposure durations. Unlike a dark frame library for 30 min narrowband exposures, this doesn't take long
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26-05-2013, 12:21 PM
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ze frogginator
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 22,078
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Quote:
Originally Posted by naskies
Aah yes - writing down the steps is a good idea! If I miss out on a month's worth of imaging due to bad weather, I usually come back and forget a critical step
By the way, I just found this very excellent article with step-by-step instructions and screen shots - in retrospect, it would have saved me much frustration:
http://astro.azurewebsites.net/Article/ArticleContent/5
The article reminds me of a couple of things that I forgot below:
* I use 2x2 by default with the Lodestar (SX recommends it in their manual too) - I get fewer image artefacts and faster update rates too.
* Dark frame scaling has never worked well for me on the Lodestar (even with a bias frame library) - so I prefer to take darks at lots of different exposure durations. Unlike a dark frame library for 30 min narrowband exposures, this doesn't take long 
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Yeah I got Russel's great article. I used it originally 2yrs ago. I had it on the laptop last night again to refresh my memory while trying to figure things out.  Good calibration should iron out most of the issues. Then some more will probably popup on the next step.
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