Hi all,
I am starting again to try Sharpcap and I keep seeing this shift (bottom right side) on live stack (this being the worst)
Not sure why is happening. I am sure easy explanation. But what is it?
Thanks for any help!
Why is the screen crooked? Newbie
Re: Why is the screen crooked? Newbie
Hi,
I think you've got flexure in your optical train. Make sure that there is no slop in your focuser. Check that your scope is balanced on your mount. Your camera is suddenly shifting orientation. If unsure make sure that everything is locked down. Grab your camera with one hand and put some force on it in all directions. Is there a clunking sound or can you feel something not right?
Brian
I think you've got flexure in your optical train. Make sure that there is no slop in your focuser. Check that your scope is balanced on your mount. Your camera is suddenly shifting orientation. If unsure make sure that everything is locked down. Grab your camera with one hand and put some force on it in all directions. Is there a clunking sound or can you feel something not right?
Brian
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Re: Why is the screen crooked? Newbie
Thank you Brian. I will check.
Someone mentioned that maybe was due to being alt/az instead of equatorial mount?
Someone mentioned that maybe was due to being alt/az instead of equatorial mount?
Re: Why is the screen crooked? Newbie
That certainly is a possibility, field rotation with an alt/az, but I would expect something different looking. This looks like a sudden shift. Let's let our alt/az astrophotographers chime in.
The good thing is that if it is entirely due to alt/az, you can crop the image.
The good thing is that if it is entirely due to alt/az, you can crop the image.
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Re: Why is the screen crooked? Newbie
Hi,
this effect is a result of the mount being alt/az, so as it tracks the sky the view seen by the camera rotates slowly. I am assuming that you were live stacking in SharpCap - the live stacking corrects for the rotation, lining up the new images with the original one, but it cannot do anything about the bits of sky that were in view to begin with but are now out-of-view due to the rotation. Those out-of-view areas receive no new data and gradually darken as the stack progresses.
Nothing really to worry about - just be aware that if you image things near the zenith (overhead) then the rotation is quicker than if you image lower down in the sky. At the end of the process, crop the final image to remove the dark areas.
cheers,
Robin
this effect is a result of the mount being alt/az, so as it tracks the sky the view seen by the camera rotates slowly. I am assuming that you were live stacking in SharpCap - the live stacking corrects for the rotation, lining up the new images with the original one, but it cannot do anything about the bits of sky that were in view to begin with but are now out-of-view due to the rotation. Those out-of-view areas receive no new data and gradually darken as the stack progresses.
Nothing really to worry about - just be aware that if you image things near the zenith (overhead) then the rotation is quicker than if you image lower down in the sky. At the end of the process, crop the final image to remove the dark areas.
cheers,
Robin
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- Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2021 7:15 pm
Re: Why is the screen crooked? Newbie
Thank you