Moving from one Remote Hosting Site to Another

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Willem Jan Drijfhout avatar

For two years I have been imaging remotely, and I have loved every bit of it. But this year started off a bit rocky.

On 15 February 2026, I received unexpected news: the site hosting my telescope would close on 1 April. I had six weeks to find a new location, plan a trip to Spain, and transfer my equipment. I revisited my original selection criteria and contacted all known hosting sites in Spain/Portugal. Most didn't have immediate availability. Two did, and after individual calls with both, I chose Roboscopes — located near Fregenal de la Sierra in Extremadura, on the premises of e-Eye, Europe's largest remote hosting site.

I flew into Alicante on April 6, rented a car large enough to hold all my equipment, and drove to the old site. It was two years ago that I had seen my telescope last, but it was in pristine condition. After carefully labelling cables and taking photos, everything was packed within 2.5 hours. Also the electronics cabinet fit perfectly — no disassembly needed.

The following day I arrived at the new site and met the Roboscopes team — Steve, Peter, and later Manuel. They had everything well prepared. The magnetic drill-press was an invaluable tool to bolt the mount onto the pier, and a small but necessary height adjustment was solved by removing the levelling plate. After connecting all cables and powering up, everything worked immediately. Polar alignment, which Steve and Peter did by eye during the day, was only 7 arcminutes off when I did it in the evening. The goal of <2 arcminutes was achieved in less than 10 minutes.

The final day covered flat panel installation, camera install, custom horizon profiles, software adjustments, etc. That seemed like the end of it, but it turned out that after three years (finally) the scope was out of collimation. Unfortunately I had to wait another day for that due to clouds and rain. But on Saturday night together with Peter — a collimation expert — the collimation could be done. The Skywave score increased from 7.0 to 8.9.

Overall the move went smoother than expected. The telescope is now operational on Pier 6, the system is performing well, and the first images from the new site are included in some recently published images (M19, M100). Some people think that remote imaging is 'not real', or 'easy', because everything goes automatic. But nothing is more besides the truth. A remote setup is challenging, involves constant attention and from time to time hands-on work. And yes, I loved tinkering again with the system...

This is just a short version of the story. If you're interested, feel free to check out the full story here.

CS, Willem Jan.

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John Hayes avatar

Willem Jan,

Thanks for that report. I’ll definitely check out the full story. I completely agree with you about remote imaging. Yes, it allows you to image from a location where the skies are dark, often clear and with better seeing, but nothing about it is easy. When something dies, it’s a giant hassle to fix it and keeping things running can be a challenge. It’s great to hear that you found another site and that things went so well with your move. Well done!

John

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rokpalcic avatar

Well done and written Willem-Jan - was great meeting you and chatting at E-EYE a few weeks ago! Hope to see many great images.

Cheers,

Rok

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Obdulio Garcia-Nicolas avatar

Dear Willem-Jan, Welcome to e-EyE, you chose a great place, I can tell from own experience.

CS,

Obdulio

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Willem Jan Drijfhout avatar

rokpalcic · May 8, 2026 at 07:12 AM

Well done and written Willem-Jan - was great meeting you and chatting at E-EYE a few weeks ago! Hope to see many great images.

Cheers,

Rok

Hi Rok,

Great to hear from you. Hope things are going well for you. Did you manage to capture C/2025 R3 Panstarrs?

CS, Willem Jan.

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Willem Jan Drijfhout avatar

Obdulio Garcia-Nicolas · May 8, 2026 at 11:56 AM

Dear Willem-Jan, Welcome to e-EyE, you chose a great place, I can tell from own experience.

CS,

Obdulio

Thanks Obdulio, your CDK14 is doing very well there indeed. You’ve made some great images. No need to change probably, or are you still thinking about a deep dive into Chile?

CS, Willem Jan.

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Obdulio Garcia-Nicolas avatar

Thanks, I am glad you like the images. It's long since my last image due to crazy amount of little issues that I hope they are all solved now, nothing to do with the place, just incompatibilities with some parts of the equipment, but all should be in order. Looking forward for the next clear nights to test it all. About Chile, it would be nice, but I wouldn't be able to connect from work while acquiring images there, so even automatizing everything I could not even check, so it is difficult for me at the moment. I will stay at e-EyE for the moment.

Cheers

Obdulio

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rokpalcic avatar

Willem Jan Drijfhout · May 8, 2026, 02:29 PM

rokpalcic · May 8, 2026 at 07:12 AM

Well done and written Willem-Jan - was great meeting you and chatting at E-EYE a few weeks ago! Hope to see many great images.

Cheers,

Rok

Hi Rok,

Great to hear from you. Hope things are going well for you. Did you manage to capture C/2025 R3 Panstarrs?

CS, Willem Jan.

I did but missing best part of it now as its only observable from south… There will be others though :)

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Dave & Telescope avatar

Thanks for sharing this. 1000% agree. I applaud all of you who are running equipment from very long distances away, in some cases half way around the globe! I am very fortunate I am within driving distance from my hosting site (4 hrs). I don’t think I have the patience for anywhere I can’t get to in reasonable time. At some of these facilities on-site tech support is definitely not 24/7. The site owners do not live there. Some equipment they are not familiar with. And some infrastructure details I find get missed and you have to be on top of everything to get the most imaging time you can. It is well worth it to have the awesome sky conditions, but it is far from a “set it and forget it” experience.

CS

Dave

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