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wimvb

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Everything posted by wimvb

  1. Thank you, guys. Much appreciated.
  2. This target needs no introduction. The image is a collaboration with @Firas. He collected the data with his ONTC 8" telescope and Moravian G2-8300 CCD camera, and did the preprocessing. I processed the masters. data: RGB: 50 + 30 + 20, 180 s exposures (5 hours total) L: 171 180 s exposures (8.5 hours) Processed in PixInsight. The RGB data was a bit thin, but the XT-suite made it manageable.
  3. That doesn't sound good at all. Rust = moisture + particles, neither of which should be inside a camera.
  4. That's not because of having an observatory; that's because of the permacloud.
  5. I use a MeanWell 12V 150W power supply. Put it in a plastic box with 12V car outlets. Nowadays it's attached to the base of a pier in my observatory. It has worked well for almost 7 years now.
  6. The StellarMate X is a fanless pc, as you already found out. There is also the StellarMate Pro, that has power outputs for various equipment and dew heaters. Unlike the ASIAIR, StellarMate is not limited to any particular vendor or equipment. But to be fair, I'm not a fan of the StellarMate app. Normally, I use a web browser connection to setup and monitor a sequence. It's easy and works on any operating system. Imho, any remote setup is going to require some tinkering and learning. But the technology is getting mature enough that the tinkering can be kept to a minimum. Also, the difference between Windows and Linux isn't much of an issue nowadays. When I started setting up a remote rig, there was no pre-installed and configured system, and installation required knowledge of Linux. Gina's various discussions on this forum are evidence of this. My latest installation (going from Ekos/Kstars, via Astroberry, to StellarMate) was a lot simpler with only needing to burn the system to a memory card and configuring it for my equipment. Wifi is going to be the weak link. The StellarMate pro (step up from the X) does have an external antenna, and it does have a hot spot mode. You might also consider a wifi antenna in your apartment. That might give you just enough signal for your setup. The advantage of a system on a fanless computer (Mele, StellarMate Pro, or Raspberry Pi) is that it is self contained. Once you've set up a sequence, it doesn't need further supervision. if the Wifi signal is lost, a sequence just keeps on going.
  7. Nice to see you here again, Louise. After reading your op and some of the response, I'm still somewhat confused. You write that you're interested in the synscan wifi module to control your mount. With that a standalone autoguider. What will you use for camera control? As an alternative to the Staraid, there are the Lacerta Mgen autoguider, the Skywatcher Synguider, and the Celestron Nexguide. (I have no personal experience with any of these, although I did look into the Lacerta many years ago.) The Lacerta is the more expensive option. Otoh it seems to have a better track record. It deserves to mention that it was the first autoguider to incorporate multi star guiding, even before PHD and Ekos. There are other options for you. The easiest is the ASIAIR, but that is limited to certain equipment. Next are Stellarmate OS, and Astroberry. Both run off a Raspberry pi, and require a minimum of set up/tinkering.Any Raspberry Pi solution will require a 5V power source. StellarMate OS, including the app, costs about 50 $, while Astroberry is free, but lags in development. The StellarMate comes with an app that installs on an iPad or similar android device. Both can be used with a webreader such as chrome. There is also the StellarMate X, pre-installed on a fanless computer. This comes with internal power ports and dew heater outlets. Finally, you can have a small fanless pc, such as the Mele Quieter, with your setup, and run ASCOM on a windows machine. The downside with all these solutions is that they require a stable wifi connection. Although, once you have set up your imaging sequence, they all run stand alone, if you want to. Of all the options mentioned, I only have experience with the StellarMate and Astroberry. Once set up, these systems just work, and keep on working, even if you lose the wifi connection. Hope this helps.
  8. The cheapest way: SW newtonians come with a cheap 2× barlow. Unscrew the lower black ring that holds the optics. Drill a 1.5-2 mm hole in the very centre if the top cover. Voilà a budget collimation cap. Not the very best, but it will do for rough collimation. Btw, if you have a laser collimator, use that with the barlow (with optics in place). The barlow will spread the laser beam, and you centre the shadow of the primary mirror's marker ring on the laser's bullseye. That's how I collimate my MakNewt.
  9. It has so far, only been catalogued by the near infrared 2MASS survey. Since this is a NIR survey, it's of no surprise that it received the label "near infrared object". Most likely, no person (before you, Frank) has ever noticed it or taken a closer look at it. You could send your findings to either a local professional astronomer, or to a PN hunter like Marcel Drechsler or Dana Patchick. A simbad search gives a link to a 1995 paper on the globular clusters near M81, but only as one of many data points in a graph. There's no further mention of it in that paper.
  10. Nice! More than 1000 according to wikipedia, and 4291 registered entries in Simbad when you look up the Coma super cluster (but those may not all be unique entries).
  11. Will be delivered on wednesday, so all is good.
  12. Thank you very much, Bryan. A new motor is on its way. I've only missed one clear night so far.
  13. The stream is about brightness (luminance, if you will), while the background is about colour. There is no ifn, so you can keep the background fairly flat. With this image, I would probably start by using a very strong dose of MMT on chrominance with a mask protecting the galaxies, on the RGB image, before stretching As i wrote before, the luminance can be controlled by a combination of Histogram Transformation, Curves Transformation, and HDR compression (HDRMT). I played around with the image you posted, and came up with this. Just a little more of the tidal stream (it's a jpeg, xisf would be better), but kept detail in the galaxies. No work on the background.
  14. in the mean time, it's a clear night 😏
  15. That may very well all be, but I don't want to blow out my mount's motherboard, testing. Better safe than sorry.
  16. 6 bars per coil on the stator, which has 8 coils, and 2 x 50 on the rotor Thanks, both. Vlaiv, I got the same information from the EQ5/EQ6 group on facebook. Besides the number of steps and the torque, there is also a difference in the phase resistance, and with that the current draw. There are low current versions and high current versions of most stepper motors, as well as 5V and 12V versions. The motor in the mount is 12V, but since a model number is missing, it may be either low resistance (high current) or high resistance (low current). I measured a resistance between connections of about 6 - 8 Ohms. Not very conclusive, since the phase resistance also depends on how the phases are wired internally.
  17. It is 48 mm (haven't measured it, though). The removed back makes it look shorter than it is. The front measures 42×42 mm, and it's slightly longer than that. 0.85A/phase is also plausible, the mount draws about 2.5 A while slewing. But I also have to make sure that the shaft is long enough. The aluminium block in the background (right side) sits between the motor and the belt. I ordered the replacement because I need something fast. I don't want to miss galaxy season.
  18. ... and combine that with temperature changes, you have a recipe for metal fatigue. A few days ago, my AZ-EQ6 started tracking erratically, and guiding was all over the place. I narrowed the cause down to the RA motor (it made a strange noise when slewing with the hand controller). Today I removed the motor and opened it up ... I've ordered a replacement motor from Pierro Astro, but these are quite expensive (140 €). As a backup, I'll see if a standard NEMA17 0.5 Nm stepper will do. Btw, does anyone know if this is a 0.9 or a 1.8 degrees/step motor?
  19. I've never had much luck with GHS on galaxy images. I use a combination of Histogram stretch, Curve Transformation and HDR Multiscale Transform to control the core
  20. Great image. Definitely better than the bin2 version.
  21. Nice!! The tidal stream of ngc 3628 is just visible.
  22. Thanks, Göran. Of course it has; nr 215.
  23. According to Wikipedia: "NGC 2782 is a peculiar spiral galaxy that formed after a galaxy merger in the constellation Lynx. The galaxy lies 75 million light years away from Earth, which means, given its apparent dimensions, that NGC 2782 is approximately 100,000 light years across. NGC 2782 has an active galactic nucleus and it is a starburst and a type 1 Seyfert galaxy. NGC 2782 is mentioned in the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies in the category galaxies with adjacent loops." This image was taken during a gap in the clouds on March 11. Despite the fact that the sky was clear during the entire night, I could only collect 4 hours of data. After the meridian flip, my mount broke down, and now I'm waiting for a replacement RA motor. Nonetheless, the data was collected with my SW 190MN and ASI294MM camera RGB: 1.5, 1.5, and 1 hour Processed in PixInsight
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