Calibrated offsets in RA and Dec! Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer · skygaze · ... · 4 · 148 · 0

skygaze 0.00
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This is useful if you cannot see your target or are in a very difficult field to confirm.
The other night I was wanting to capture comet C/2017 T1 (Heinze) from the backyard with my Canon 60Da and 70-200mm telephoto set at 200mm. So I focused on beta Cass, then shifted the mount for what seemed like a reasonable amount and took a test shot. My finder starchart field was too wide for me to confirm the starfield on the image, and my fingers were freezing up at -25C, so I took a chance that it was good enough.
The next day, I found out it wasn't. Then I remembered in my youth in the light-polluted skies of downtown Montreal, using RA and Dec sweeps that began at a bright star, then swinging the scope in fixed increments to arrive at my target.

It's a pity the StarAdventurer does not have setting circles. Okay, but it does have enough to do it:
Dec: 15 full turns of the Dec knob move the camera exactly 90 degrees! 1 full turn = 6 degrees
R.A. See those tabs or teeth above the RA clutch? Moving the scope 4 of those tabs is 1/5 of a circle: 1 Tab or tooth = 1h12min RA!  You should practice the RA movement in daylight (or a mild night), because you have to hold the scope steady while first lossening the RA clutch. Once well loose, shift by the appropriate number of full and partial teeth. IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION. Yes, the first time I did this at -25C, I moved the scope the wrong way in RA. Sigh. But when I checked the field the next day, it was bang on the amount of shift. ...this is why it is good to practice in the backyard before wasting opportunities in a dark sky....
Just in case like me, it was not obvious from the start, that the camera platform on the StarAdventurer is designed so that the long part of the frame is aligned exactly N-S in Dec, while the short part of the frame covers RA. Assuming you attach the camera directly instead of using a ball head.
Alister.
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(deleted)
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dominique 0.90
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Hi
I use a red dot finder attached to the hot shoe: ttps://www.astromarket.org/accessoires/zoekers---red-dot/zoekers-voor-dslr/red-dot-led-finder---metal602285124363

More option you can find here: https://www.astromarket.org/accessoires/zoekers---red-dot/zoekers-voor-dslr/
 And I take a test shot and compare with a star chart (paper or on iPhone) of that area to see if I framed it right. of course doing this at -25 C is not easy. What a hobby.
Kind Rgds,
Dominique
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skygaze 0.00
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Great ideas! Of course I have a red dot finder, but it never occurred to me to take it off the scope and put it on the camera. That should really help!
Clear skies, and hopefully not so cold,
Alister.
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tomrgray
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I have tried red dot finder too, but by far the most accurate method is to use astrometry (‘plate-solving’). Stellarmate via RPi4 provides this for me for ~£130 and does all my image capture, guiding, calibration etc. You can access this via VNC on any device and see exactly where you are pointing using KSTARS planetarium. Also a free App with a star chart planned for next release.
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