I spent a few hours last night dialing in the Orion...



I spent a few hours last night dialing in the Orion “TOAG” or Thin Off-Axis Guider, which I bought a couple years ago, but have never been able to get working properly. I’ve tried seven or eight times, added it to my imaging train a couple times a year, attempting to get things working without success. Well, I went at it again last night, and you know what? It came together. I still have some weirdness to tinker with–to work out, but for the first time I wasn’t guiding with a separate scope. I was guiding at the same focal length as the ZS61 using a pick-off prism that directs a portion of the field of view up into the guide camera. Here’s the setup I used last night to dial-in the distance between the primary camera and guide camera, and then bring everything into focus. I ended up with some pretty cool shots, but my main purpose was to get Off-Axis Guiding (OAG) adjusted and working–and that was with me slewing around the sky to clear areas between banks of clouds to find some halfway interesting targets. In this setup I’m using my trusty ZWO ASI120MM-S for guiding, and the ZWO ASI071MC cooled color camera for the primary. The goal here is to be able to guide (track the motion of the earth against the star field to a very fine degree, and make small incremental adjustments to the EQ mount) so that I can take long exposures without worrying about the external guidescope issues I know all of you care deeply about, like field rotation and differential motion between a guide scope and imaging telescope. I have been able to take 20 minute exposures with a guidescape and camera, but the stars are not as sharp as I would like–think pressing down the button of your camera and holding the shutter open for 20 or 30 minutes and have everything in the field of view remain in sharp focus. That’s essentially what the guiding system accomplishes, taking continuous images of the stars and feeding them to some pretty sophisticated software that controls the motion of the equatorial mount (that’s the white z-shaped device with the black boxes on which the telescope is fastened and balanced).

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Published on June 09, 2018 17:48
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