Appendix b – Meade Instruments LX600 User Manual

Page 53

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53

Appendix B

Updating

The Utility program also has the ability to load new fi rmware

into the StarLock. The fi rmware release code must fi rst be

downloaded from Meade’s website. It should be put in an easily

located directory such as your desktop. The fi le will be named

“StarLock_Vxy.Ldr”. To update the fi rmware, establish a serial

connection with the StarLock by getting images to download by

pressing the FOCUS button. Once you have a good connection,

click the button again to stop focusing and then click the “Update”

button. A fi le dialog similar to the one below will appear:

Navigate to the new fi rmware version and either double click on

it, or select it and click on “Open.” The status bar at the bottom

of the screen will show you the fi rmware being download. After

the fi rmware has been successfully downloaded and checked for

correctness, it will be burned into the StarLock. DO NOT POWER

OFF THE COMPUTER OR TELESCOPE DURING THIS PROCESS.

Once the new fi rmware has been successfully burned into the

StarLock a message indicating the operation is complete will be

posted on the bottom of the display.

NOTE: Close the StarLock Utility program and cycle the telescope

power off and then on again to complete the update.

Monitoring StarLock Guiding

There are two different methods of monitoring StarLock guide

performance. The fi rst method is to look at the guiding history

as a “Point Spread Function”. This presentation basically sums

up the images of the guide star at each guide update cycle. It

provides a good prediction of how well tracking is going and on

the seeing conditions. To use this method, click on the PSF button.

The fi eld of view of the display is approximately 20 arcseconds

across. If your star is stretched horizontally, you are either not

tracking aggressively enough, or you are tracking too aggressively.

Change the Guide Rate setting under the StarLock menu on the

telescope, reset the PSF or run the ARC as discussed in Appendix

C and start a new measurement, if your star gets worse, change

the Guide Rate in the other direction. Adjust your rate for best

results with your seeing conditions.

In general, if seeing is poor, you will need to reduce your guide

rate so you do not chase seeing. Under better conditions you

can increase guide rates until over correction starts to make the

scope jump back and forth across the star making it too wide

again.

Histograms

The other way to monitor tracking is with the histogram function.

This plots how many corrections are made at each distance. The

result is typically a Gaussian distribution function. The plot will

tell you about seeing and your alignment quality. To make this

measurement click on the Histogram button.

The example above is pretty typical. You can see that both the

RA and DEC corrections are plotted in the range of –8 to +8

arcseconds. The width of the distribution is an indication of seeing

conditions. In this case seeing is about 1/5 to 2 arcminutes. Both

distributions are pretty symmetric and centered on zero. This

indicates a good telescope alignment.

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