Very good low numbers but what the heck is going on with that partial? Lots of harmonics or crazy dance goin on! I would like to know how it guides! Maybe need 0.5s exposures to tame the small jittery dance steps! Haha
Reading my PE graph
Kevin_A yeah, this will be my 2nd attempt. The first mount had pretty bad secondary harmonics, but this one looks nuts!
And may want to take your own data plots with your rig on the mount to see if that plot that ZWO sent you is even accurate. These mounts can behave quite differently depending on load and location in the sky.
KC_Astro_Mutt i would try it out and use short 300ms durations at 1s and 0.5 and see. Remember that the corrections won’t be huge as the errors are small… but 0.5s might be the sweet spot for this mount.
Hi KC_Astro_Mutt,
Here is the Partial Zoom pic from https://bbs.astronomy-imaging-camera.com/d/15989-getting-the-best-performance-from-my-am5/18
Let's put your Partial Zoom pic and mikenoname's to the same scalar, it will be like:
It seems most of the slopes are as same as mikenoname's AM5 and yours got much low numbers of Periodic error.
We zoom out the Y-axis for a better look.
BTW, we are considering a better way to describe the specific behavior of SW gears.
- Edited
mikenoname yeah, I plan to. I was curious to see ZWO's answer. As you can see in their response above, they didn't want to tackle it either, lol.
- Edited
ASIMount@ZWO It seems most of the slopes are as same as mikenoname's AM5 and yours got much low numbers of Periodic error.
The amplitude of the Periodic error is not important for auto-guiding (it is only important for non-autoguided visual). The first derivative of the Periodic Error is the limiting number for auto-guiding. Large, smooth periodic errors can be easily guided away (take for example the Avalon mounts), rough slopes are what makes it harder to guide.
Taking your rescaled overlays:
I see a factor of 1.6 between the worse case derivative for Mike's curve compared to the worse case for Mutt's (worse) curve. For auto-guiding, Mutt's mount is worse than Mike's mount, even though Mutt's periodic error has much lower ampitude.
Mutt's curve has very high fifth order harmonics. From the white paper that I am writing, the first derivative of the N-th term of a Fourier Series looks like:
Notice the "N" that is inside the argument of the sinusoid pops outside (using the Chain Rule in calculus) as a direct multiplier of the amplitude of the derivative. A large 5th harmonic therefore contibutes to a much larger error.
Mutt's high derivative regions also occur 5 times more often during a long exposure than Mike's mount.
Chen
- Edited
w7ay this does not sound promising... this is my 2nd (and last) attempt at the AM5. If this one doesn't work, I won't try another.
KC_Astro_Mutt You do not seem to have good luck with AM5s.
I am just hoping that with a load yours will perform better than that graph. Only one way to find out. Collect your own unguided data and cross your fingers.
mikenoname I just hope I can collect said data before the return period is up.
So, in the end, I finally got a cloudless couple of nights to work with this mount. Well past the return period. It's WAY worse than my first one, and seemingly unable to achieve an rms below about 1.4". It's a $2300 paperweight.
ZWO states 0.5 To 0.8RMS in their publicity. O am sure you can make a point to return it.
- Edited
tempus they keep sending me to view articles, try this, try that... every time I've brought up returning/replacing it, the email conversation ends.
Simon sent me a list of things to try, but with zero success. The harmonics in my current mount are far worse than in my previous mount. When Chen says it's bad, it's bad, lol.
KC_Astro_Mutt. What about your retailer? They have some leverage with ZWO. Hopefully it wasn't bought direct from ZWO. If not, work with Simon. I can't believe he will not help you somehow. The AM5 is the biggest lottery of the astro world at this point.
- Edited
tempus Simon did try to help. He sent a long list of things to try. Best I could get is 3 minutes of really great guiding, followed by 3 to 5 minutes of erratic crazy guiding. This time, I can't even get the 3 minutes of great guiding.
I suppose I could chat with the retailer. The first retailer I purchased from couldn't get anyone from ZWO to even acknowledge them. I don't know why a different retailer would do any better. Maybe I can get an exception for a return at best.
Edit to add:
This is what Simon sent:
Don't use long exposures - you need short high frequency guiding ... 0.5 - 1s max
Do not use large amounts of aggression ... 35-40% should see you guide better and never have high DEC agression as RA will just chase it
Have a relatively good balanced mount - while harmonic driver mounts don't need to be super accurately balanced - you do need to be reasonable balanced
Ensure the power supply is robust enough voltage wise / current wise
Don't exceeed the FL guidelines unless you are happy that guiding will be affected
Ensure guide scope to main scope FL ratio does not exceed around 5:1 for best results
Be well polar aligned!
- Edited
The 2 first point are straight from Chen's playbook. I don't think any of the rest will make that much of a difference with such an erratic guiding unless you are way out on some. Get a hold of your retailer. Hopefully he's a good one. I had an issue with a camera at one point. ZWO was ignoring me. I spoke with the retailer and he contacted them. Things got things moving in a matter of days and I got a resolution. Unfortunately, getting a good retailer is also a matter of luck or careful selection. Keep hope!
KC_Astro_Mutt i would try running at 0.5s exposures with 300ms RA and Dec max durations. Any higher than 300ms might cause more erratic guiding as the mount might be trying to correct a over correction if its too large.
- Edited
tempus The AM5 is the biggest lottery of the astro world at this point.
Nah, the USB hardware in ZWO products beats the AM5 by a mile :-).
The AM5 simply is QC'ing the wrong thing. They are QC'ing the amplitude of the periodic error (and still boasting about it for the AM3), while the parameter to QC is the first derivative of the curve.
They should trash the gears with the large slopes instead of passing it to the customer as a usable product. (Note that large harmonic distortion means large slope by the chain rule of calculus. So, when you see lots of wiggles in the curve, run, don't walk, to return the stuff.)
And if I am not wrong, they have even reduced the period of the AM3 from 430.82 seconds down to 288 seconds. That would instantly bump the already large slopes of the strain wave gears up by another 50% (again, from the chain rule). What are they thinking?
It is not clear, but I saw recent spec for the AM5 to also have a 288 second period. It is either a documentation error, or that mount has been revised too to the shorter period.
Chen