V2.1 - 2/21/2023
One recent feature that is still being improved is autofocus. Using the ZWO EAF you can electronically focus your telescope and now it can be done automatically. The EAF is attached to your telescope focuser either with the included bracket or with a custom bracket. If you are handy you can even make one on your own. Before AF can work efficiently you must ensure that the shafts are locked really good. Most shafts including that on the EAF have a flat side that must have a set screw torqed properly against the flat to reduce backlash. As of this writing, ZWO has released a new EAF that runs off USB power. The original version required 12V and a USB connection. I have been told that the mechanics and gearing are the same so should be interchangeable.
Everyone is familiar with autofocus on their cameras or phones. These work great with bright daytime scenes but don't work well or at all under low light levels. With telescopes the current method utilizes multiple exposures while advancing the EAF motor in fixed steps to plot a vcurve similar to the one shown at the top of this page and is based on the size of stars in the field. You first must start with an image that is in eyeball focus. Then, a dozen or more shots are taken and are run through a formula to determine the curve. The curve is an approximation, but the apex should represent the position with the best focus. Lastly the routine will do a short validation test taking 3 or 4 shots near the apex to select the best possible position of the motor. The curve will never be precise due to atmospheric seeing. However, we are not shooting for precise. We really want to know where the bottom of the vcurve is. This point represents the EAF position that should result in the lowest HFD or smallest star size. This is the red dot shown in the first image here.
So this explains how it functions. So how do we use it? In principle it is very easy. The autofocus settings are located under Focuser Settings. There are two main settings that affect how well AF works, AF Exposure and Step Size. The AF Exposure setting here is the default AF exposure. The exposure used depends largely on what filter if any you are using. Shorter exposures generally work best. However with narrowband or broadband filters exp of 1-3 seconds wont work very well. In those cases you want to use 3-4X what you would use with a luminance or no filter. Because each scope is different you have to try different exposures to see whats best. If you use an EFW filter wheel, you will notice now that each filter has its own AF exposure time. This is set under the filter wheel configuration screen. This allows you to set custom exposures based on the current filter used.
The next setting is Step Size. This is the number of EAF motor steps that will advance between AF exposure tests. This can be useful to tune the AF sequence when you have custom setups where the default of 30 steps is not correct. Examples for changing this are when you have connected the EAF to your 10 to 1 fine focus shaft. You could multiply the default by 10 to make it 500 steps. Another example would be if you use a homegrown belt system to focus your Redcat or camera lenses. Or maybe you just want to speed up the AF sequence and are ok with a little loss of precision. Whatever the reason this setting can help you tune the AF for your particular setup. My C11 Edge with a Feathertouch focuser uses 60 steps.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.