kiwiapple
Well-Known Member
This has probably been the best week for astrophotography that I have had since getting started with the hobby in 2021. A week of consecutive clear skies meant that I could leave my rigs set up so I could do some really long integrations and compile several nights' exposures without having to recalibrate and realign my mounts. For this reason, I expected last night's sessions to proceed seamlessly and thus was surprised that neither of my two rigs (an 80mm refractor on an AM5 mount and an 8" SCT on an HEQ5 mount) would successfully find their targets. I scratched my head and tried to reset my ASIAIRs and made sure there weren't errant clouds in the way. I tried to restart my plans and see if that would help. Nothing worked. Finally I remembered that I had shot some dark frames with the 80mm refractor just before my plans were due to start, so I checked to see if it was trying to plate solve through a dark filter (which lets no light through) and voilà! That was the problem! So I fixed that and set that scope on its merry way. Then I checked again on the 8" SCT and saw that I had not plugged in the dew heater when I removed the scope's cap, so the objective was covered in dew. I cleaned that up and plugged the dew heater in and voilà again! I was good to go. But in the meantime while all that was going on I noticed that Antares had risen above the level of my roof so I decided to set up a tripod with my Benro Polaris mount and an astro-modded Canon DSLR to shoot Rho Ophiuchi for a few hours. So this was a nice compensation for 90 minutes or so of hair-pulling boneheadedness.