Focusing was the bane of my existence for several years. Manual was always a hit and miss,miss,miss… So I built an Arduino based manual electronic focus driver. Much better but still required human intervention.
Finally, after doing a bunch of upgrading (or as a matter of the curse of upgrading…) I decided to man-up and buy a real auto-focuser. A comedy of errors with ZWO EAF, I finally have my Pegasus Astro Focus Cube2. Which has worked great out of the box.
My reason was it has a separate 12 VDC to power the motor so the USB is not trying to control as well and actually power the motor. Separates the control and the actual power to run the focuser. I got mine one week before they discontinued the Cube2, and went to the Cube3. The Cube3 is powered by the USB circuit.
It doesn’t really matter about how long autofocusing actually takes to do the fine adjustments. What matters is the quality you will realize from going to fully automatic focusing in NINA.
I’ve never bothered with how long it takes, although it does interrupt the actual imaging while the autofocus routine functions. And it can in my experience effect to total number of images I will gather that are usable.
The quality of the images in the Subs is sharper and better when stacked. So whatever time it takes, makes up in better overall images to work with. The amount of time Autofocusing takes out of your routine more than returns in higher quality subs.
Something I found very valuable was Cuiv’s tutorials about NINA. You might be able to mine out some clarity from his one about Auto-Focusing. When transitioning to full-auto operation (Well, simi auto) I went from front to back with his NINA stuff. My only problem was getting my Meridian Flip working right. But that was settings in my mount, not NINA.
Yep, fully automatic focusing is worth every second it might waste. Because the returns are great in better images. I use Hocus-Focus in my NINA routine.