I did not quite get plate solving working today. That is, I solved this image, but I couldn’t get the mount to even try to re-center on the new coordinates, and I was worried about losing sky, so I just said “OK, you get to stay where you are”, and started rolling.

My standard imaging set includes an hour of 5min subframes (an even dozen), followed by 2 hours of 20min subframes (six). The guiding got real boring during the first hour, and I was able to soldier through another hour-and-twenty before I was too tired to deal with it anymore, and shut down for the night.

What a beautiful night. I keep resolving to shoot more targets in Leo and Virgo, but I discovered the joy of leaving the dome facing east, and that helps a lot (at least, until I get dome automation running), so I decided to hunt my favorite galaxies, up near The Big Dipper, instead.

This is M63, the Sunflower. It’s a tough test of the optical system, because of all the wispy spiral arms. And of course, it’s nowhere near the center of the frame, because I don’t want to talk about it, see above.

This is a difficult target, with very faint outer arms.
This is a difficult target, because of the very faint outer arms.

I’m starting to get the hang of the new capture software. They haven’t quite “earned my business” yet, but it’s pretty close.

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