Tony Gondola · Oct 4, 2025, 04:19 PM
I am going through the process of collimating a GSO/Skywatcher style RC. When I first got it, it was slightly out so I decided to line everything up on the bench using a Cheshire and laser. At that point everything looked perfect through the Cheshire. First look at the stars and I had a field full of comets, my bench alignment made things far worse then it was to begin with. After a LOT of undirected tweaking of both the primary and secondary I was able to get to this:
📷 star test 3.jpg
There’s still some on-axis coma with the P dot not centered. The the off axis astigmatism is also unbalanced. I think my next move is as follows:
With a star centered, adjust the primary to remove the remaining on axis coma.
Balance the off axis astig. with adjustments of the secondary.
Repeat if needed.
Am I on the right track here?
Hi Tony
I’ll follow your thread because I’m going through a similar experience.
Earlier this month, I tried the Cheshire + laser + DSI method and was able to reach this level: 📷 NGC281-300x300-session_1_session_2_session_3_session_4_session_5.jpg
(This image is a stack of 300 images)
I’m not sure whether the issue is with collimation or backspacing. The stars in the corners seem to be radiating inward, yet according to the DSI method, the image appears balanced—or at least that’s what I think. I should mention that I have installed a tilt plate, though I haven’t made any adjustments to it yet.
Last week, I travelled with the scope to a Bortle 2 site (a rough, hilly drive with the scope kept on the back seat—EAF and camera still attached, resting between two pillows 😄). Things seem to have worsened since then—the corners have degraded noticeably. 📷 2025-10-01_03-02-42__-9.80_180.00s_0012.jpg
(single frame). I did not try to tweak collimation because of the bad weather.
I have not followed the DSI method to the hilt. I removed the On-Axis Coma by adjusting the primary mirror following the DSI method. But after that, I simply adjusted the secondary mirror and centred the dot. This was more because I did not want to waste a night, and the subs looked more or less “balanced” to me.
About the tilt plate: I have not made any adjustment yet to the tilt plate itself. However, my tilt improved quite a bit after installing the plate. The aberration inspector in NINA showed an improvement in the tilt measurement.
One resource to share: https://lambermont.dyndns.org/astro/rc/
It collates all the articles on RC collimation on the internet. Ignore if you have already seen this.
Do share if you manage to fix the collimation. I will get on to it when the clouds move away.
Clear skies!