This is an old revision of the document!
So you lost your telescope… It happens to the best of us. Below is a procedure to require celestial position in the event (due to power lose or Sarah Lemmon shenanigan's) the telescope has completely lost its position.
I know. It sounds weird but hear me out. The telescope doesn't know where it is and the drivers are engaged. You could use the hand controller to move it into position in the next step but that runs the risk of the Controller thinking you are going into a soft limit and thus not letting you get truly into position.
So just do what I tell you. Turn the Controller off via the big red switch. When you do this Maestro, on the desktop, will be unhappy. That's ok. It will automatically reconnect once the Controller is turned back on.
Here is the annoying bit. The telescope THINKS it knows where it is because we Aligned from Last but really it has no idea still. We do know however and can for that upon it.
With the Telescope still at the Park position go to the Settings
tab, then Calibration
and select the Use Az/Alt
radio button. Below this you will input the position as follows:
Az: 180:00:00
Alt: 25:00:00
You must write them in this format otherwise Maestro won't accept it (it doesn't have a very good syntax parser/converter).
Once these values are inputted click the From Az/Alt
. If you do not see that button and instead have a From RA/Dec
button it's because you didn't click the Use Az/Alt
radio button instructed before. Consider yourself a disappointment and hope nobody saw you make this mistake.
It is also possible to realign the telescope via a bright star in the sky. This won't be as accurate as doing a “Home Seek” but should be faster if you are already on the sky and simple lost positioning for whatever reason.
In the Alignment
section of the Settings
tab look at the Status. It should either say Completed OR Not Aligned.
image of both options
If it says Completed then you can just proceed to the next step. If it is alignment you will be unable to calibrate
On the Settings
tab of Maestro3 locate the Calibration
section then the From Bright Star
.
insert image of the above step
There is a drop down below the button. Select the star you have pointing the telescope at and simple hit the From Bright Star
button. There will be a
If the above procedure does NOT fix your issue there is something else going on. Check the RA tape for bugs, make sure the telescope is well balanced, note any errors in Maestro. If you can't find a solution contact Travis.