A weekend of mixed results, though with two excellent nights I had hoped for more, however I tripped over myself a bit and made some mistakes plus I had some interesting software problems. Perhaps ‘annoying’ would be a better description than ‘interesting’.
The plan was to pick a target and use both nights to do a proper study, my experience with imaging andromeda has taught me to spend more time and gather more images. More frames means more details and a better signal to noise ratio. However before I could do anything I needed to get everything setup and working again.
First thing was to setup the guide scope, previously I have used the Vixen A70LF for this purpose but decided in this case to try out the William Optics ZS66SD instead. I also had to get the mount properly aligned. All of this took a while and I was running a bit behind schedule by the time I started imaging.
This was the point I ran into problem number one, though it took me a while to work out the cause of the issue. Basically the guiding was terrible, lots of shift in various directions causing a bunch of nasty issues. there were a few causes for this :
Guide Scope Setup
I had used the ZS66 with the webcam, but had ran into problems getting the webcam to reach focus. Without thinking about it I used the 0.6 focal reducer to make life easier, without doing the math. This made the field of view of the guide scope way wider than that of the imaging camera. Not good, the guide software had problems making the scope move enough to register a change with out the adjustment speed being pushed right up and that meant it was constantly over running. I fixed this by using a diagonal to increase the focus length in order for the webcam to focus without the reducer, but I still think the zs66 is to wide field for the purpose.
Software Problems
I had originally used PHD Guiding for control, but I kept having problems with it even with the issues above resolved, and on the second night when I changed back to the Vixen scope for guiding. I found PHD was constantly dropping frames from the webcam, sometimes several in a row which was resulting in poor guiding. Even when it did seem to be guiding correctly the images coming back were of very poor quality with unexplained shifts (with the ZS66 anyway may be the field of view again). On the second night I tried Guidedog instead. Whilst the guiding was not perfect, it was certainly much better than I had got out of PHD.
So lots of testing, setup, changes, adjustments and general mucking about resulting in me only getting just over 2 hours 20 minutes of data back. Not quite the 8 hours I had been hoping for. The result is not one of my best :
Triangulum Galaxy
- Orion Optics 250mm F4.7 Reflector
- Vixen Sphinx Mount
- Canon EOS 1000D @ iso 800
- 29 x 5 minute exposures (plus darks & flats)
Not my best work, but it will be improved with the addition of more data on the next clear night.
