Polaroid CCD Camera User Manual

Page 48

Advertising
background image

Section 8 - Glossary

Page 44

The easiest method of finding objects is to use a reticule eyepiece, if the object is

bright enough to see. Pull the CCD optical head from the eyepiece holder and insert a

12-20mm eyepiece, focussing the eyepiece by sliding it in and out of the eyepiece

holder, not by adjusting the telescope's focus mechanism. Center the object carefully (to

within 10% of the total field) and then replace the CCD optical head. Since the head

was fully seated against the eyepiece holder when you started, fully seating it upon

replacement will assure the same focus.

If the object is too dim to see visually you will have to rely on your setting

circles. Go to a nearby star or object that is easily visible and center that object in the

CCD image. Calibrate your RA setting circle on the known object's RA and note any

DEC errors. Reposition the telescope at the intended object, using the correct RA

setting and the same DEC offset noted with the calibration object. Try a ten second or

one minute exposure and hopefully you will have winged the object. If not you will

have to hunt around for the object. You can use the Focus mode in Low resolution

mode for this and hopefully you won't have to search too far. Check in DEC first, as

DEC setting circles are often smaller and less accurate.

Telescope Port doesn't Move Telescope

- If you find the camera is not moving the telescope

for Tracking, Track and Accumulate or Self Guiding you should use the Move

Telescope command with a several second period to isolate the problem down to a

specific direction or directions. If you set the Camera Resolution to the Low mode in

the Camera Setup Command, you can move the telescope and Grab an image fairly

quickly to detect movement of the telescope pointed at a moderately bright star. Try

each of the four directions and see which ones move and which ones don't. At this

point the most likely culprit is the hand controller modification. Trace the signals from

the camera's telescope connector back through the hand controller, paying particular

attention to the offending wires.

Can't Reach Low Setpoint Temperatures

- If you find that the camera isn't getting as cold as

expected the problem is probably increased ambient temperatures. While these

cameras have temperature regulation, they still can only cool a fixed amount below the

ambient temperature (30 to 40 °C). Lowering the ambient temperature allows the

cameras to achieve lower setpoint temperatures.

CCD Frosts

- If your camera starts to frost after a year of use it's time to regenerate the

desiccant as described in Appendix C. This is a simple matter of unscrewing the

desiccant container and baking it (without the little O-ring) in an oven at 350°F for 4

hours.

No Image is Displayed

- Try the Auto Contrast setting or use the crosshairs to examine the

image pixel values and pick appropriate values for the Background and Range

parameters.

Horizontal Faint Light Streaks in Image

- some PCs apparently have the mouse generate non-

maskable interrupts when moved. These interrupts can slightly brighten the line being

read out. If this occurs, do not move the mouse during read out.

A/D Timeout or Other Errors

- Some compters require that you configure the parallel port for

"Standard" mode instead of "ECP" or "EPP" mode. These two enhanced modes can

cause A/D Timeout and other parallel errors. Refer to you computer manual for how

to use the BIOS Setup utility to configure your parallel port.

Advertising