katzinaz I have the same issues…my W latitudes get changed to E when connecting to my Cgem Ii mount. Also have had the same randomness with pa 60 degree rotation, etc.
I don't have a Synscan mount, so I am not sure if the following will work, but it might be worth a try.
Both Celestron and SkyWatcher are manufactured by Synta, so they pretty much share the same protocol.
What I had notice is that the ASIAIR pushes the Longitude to the mount right after you connect the mount to ASIAIR. And the Longitude the ASIAIR sends has the wrong Hemisphere, if you live west of Greenwich.
However, I also don't see ASIAIR push the location coordinates (by itself) to the mount at any other time, as long as you don't tap on that green Sync To Mount button in the Mount Settings window.
Connect the mount as usual, and give ASIAIR 10 seconds or so to finish sending the wrong longitude. Now go to the hand controller, and force your Longitude back to the correct Hemisphere. If you live south of the equator, do a sanity check that your mount still thinks it in the southern hemisphere. Without tricking my tablet, I have no way of testing southern hemisphere coordinates. If it has moved you from south to the north, correct it in the hand controller as well.
Now, see of things start to work properly. But remember not to touch the Sync To Mount button. If you touch that button, you will be teleported to east of Greenwich.
If that does not completely solve the problem, ASIAIR may still send your mount to weird locations with a GOTO, so make sure you have the hand controller ready to abort the GOTO, in case it does that.
Until then, you just have to wait for ZWO to fix the bug. Or, just move on to more advanced systems such as StellarMate or INDIGO Sky, or if you prefer laptops, to N.I.N.A..
With the Meridian Flip problem last year, ZWO's brilliant programmers [/s] could not find the problem until the location of the bug was pinpointed on this forum to them. The same thing may happen with this Hemisphere bug. In all these years, they probably had no clue where the bug resides (this thread was started in 2019, for god's sakes), and now that they are told exactly where the bug is, there is a glimmer of hope that they will finally fix it.
Chen