In PHD2 it is recommended to calibrate near the meridian with dec=0 and then re-use that calibration for guiding when slewing toward the imaging target for the night.
When using the Ekos internal guider does the same principle applies for calibration? So far I have been doing my calibration on my target for the night and recalibrate every time i move to a new target...
I'm just wondering if my guiding accuracy would improve by calibrating near the meridian with dec at zero.
+1. The calibration I use I did in April, IIRC.
What is true for PHD2 also holds for the internal guider: Do the calibration close to the equator (there you have full RA speed) and as high elevation as possible (i.e., close to meridian) to minimize influence of refraction and seeing.
Thanks guys. So if I understand this correctly, for me being in the southern hemisphere, I would point the scope North and set DEC to zero or close to it right?
I just did a quick simulation in Kstars... and based on my understanding if I picked these coordinates that should give me good calibration:
RA: 05h 12m 00.00s. DEC: 00.32.30.48. Azimuth 359 37 25. Altitude 51 31 51
Do I get this right?
Edit: Answering my own question here... I didn't have the meridian and equatorial lines toggled on in Kstars preferences... so yes my above assumption is correct