About Me

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A retired Welshman living in wonderful Plymouth in SW England, I’m a family man, novice sailor and boat builder, astrophotographer and motorhomer. With a passion for all things to do with education and the sea and skies above, I have a sense of adventure and innate curiosity. I write three blogs. ‘Arwen’s Meanderings’ charts my learning to sail a self-built John Welsford designed ‘Navigator’ yawl. Look out for her accompanying YouTube channel www.YouTube.com/c/plymouthwelshboy . ‘UnderSouthWestSkies’ follows my learning journey as I take up astronomy and astrophotography; a blog for beginner’s new to these hobbies, just like me. ‘Wherenexthun’, a co-written blog with my wife Maggie, shares how we ‘newbies’ get to grips with owning ‘Bryony’ an ‘Autosleeper’s Broadway EB’ motorhome, and explores our adventures traveling the UK and other parts of Europe. Come participate in one or more of our blogs. Drop us a comment, pass on a tip, share a photo. I look forward to meeting you. Take care now and have fun. Steve (and Maggie)

Monday, 5 January 2026

Imaging session: NGC 7822 and the mystery of the unplanned meridian flip

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 Imaging Session Report: NGC 7822 and the Mystery of the Unplanned Meridian Flip

Astrophotography has a funny way of keeping you humble. Some nights everything aligns perfectly; on others, the universe seems to shrug and say, “Not tonight.” This was very much one of those nights.

In this post, I’ll:

  • Introduce the deep-sky object I actually captured
  • Outline my original imaging plan
  • Break down what went wrong (and why)
  • Share my post-processing workflow based on the data I managed to collect

Think of this session as a road trip where the satnav fails, the fuel gauge lies, and you somehow end up discovering an interesting town you never planned to visit.

A Confession: This Wasn’t the Target

Let’s start with a confession.

NGC 7822 was not my intended target.
I had planned to image IC 1805 – the Heart Nebula, but plate solving simply refused to cooperate. No matter what I tried, the mount and ASIAIR stubbornly kept slewing to the same location.

Eventually, after two hours of wrestling with software, cables, and my own patience, I gave in. The system kept defaulting to NGC 7822, so I accepted the hint from the cosmos and went with it.

Accidental target? Yes.
Regret? Surprisingly, no.

What Is NGC 7822?

NGC 7822 is a vast emission nebula located in the constellation Cepheus, right on the border with Cassiopeia. It’s a challenging object visually - like trying to spot mist in a dark valley - but long-exposure imaging reveals its dramatic structure.

This glowing star-forming region sits at the end of a giant molecular cloud, approximately 3,000 light-years from Earth. It’s a stellar nursery, quietly shaping new suns while we struggle to point our telescopes at it.

Object details:

  • Right Ascension: 00h 01m 28.35s
  • Declination: +68° 42′ 43.2″
  • Magnitude: +8.0
  • Apparent size: 60 × 30 arcminutes

Astrophotography Equipment Used

For transparency (and troubleshooting), here’s the full imaging setup:

  • EQM-35 Pro mount
  • William Optics Zenithstar 61 II with 61A field flattener
  • Canon 800D (astro-modded)
  • ASIAIR Mini
  • ZWO 120mm Mini guide camera
  • RVO 32mm f/4 guide scope
  • Optolong L-eNhance clip-in filter
  • Celestron Lithium Pro power pack
  • Three 25,000 mAh power banks
    • Dummy battery for camera
    • Two dew heater straps (main scope and guide scope)
  • MSM green laser pen (polar scope alignment)
  • Google Pixel 6a smartphone
  • Samsung Galaxy A9 tablet (used as a light panel with a homemade sleeve)

Setup and the Battle With Plate Solving

After a rough polar alignment earlier, I balanced the rig in RA and Dec, powered everything up, and launched the ASIAIR.

Finding IC 1805 proved almost impossible. It was nearly at the zenith - an awkward position that made accurate slewing and plate solving unreliable. Each attempt snapped back to NGC 7822 like a compass needle refusing to point north.

From setup to surrender took two full hours. My imaging window - before clouds rolled in - was limited to 18:30–00:15, and by 20:00 I still had nothing running. Motivation was draining fast.

Eventually, I stopped fighting it. Guiding calibration went smoothly, and imaging finally began.

Environmental Challenges: The Odds Were Stacked

Several factors conspired against this session:

🌕 Moon and Location

With roads dangerously icy (nine car crashes on my road in two hours—including a police car), I stayed in the back garden.

Unfortunately:

  • A steep, wooded slope blocks the southern sky
  • The house blocks the north
  • My usable sky runs north-west to east, above 70° elevation
  • The site is Bortle 5
  • The Moon was 96% full

Trying to image faint nebulosity under these conditions is tricky, is it not.

Imaging Plan (That Mostly Didn’t Happen)

After test shots, the plan was:

  • ISO 800
  • Bulb mode
  • 300 seconds × 40 lights
  • 20 darks
  • 20 bias frames
  • 20 flats

Reality, however, had other ideas.

Seventeen light frames in, power problems began.

Power Failures and a Rogue Meridian Flip

Both the camera power bank and the main mount power source started losing charge—despite being fully charged that morning.

Fifteen minutes later, the mount performed a completely unscheduled meridian flip, even though the ASIAIR indicated several hours remaining. It was like watching my car suddenly turn around on the motorway because it thought I'd missed a junction. 

Possible Causes: ASIAIR Issues

I’ve only experienced ASIAIR problems once before. These are the likely suspects:

  • The mount and app were not properly synced
  • Incorrect latitude or longitude was entered 
  • The app may have mistakenly believed it was in the southern hemisphere

Any of these could explain the premature meridian flip.

Possible Causes: Power Bank Failures

For the first time, I wrapped the power banks in loose bubble wrap to protect them from temperatures dropping to –3°C. They were attached to the steel tripod legs using 3D-printed clips.

Possible explanations:

  • The bubble wrap caused overheating
  • Cold air pooled around the tripod at the base of the slope, draining batteries faster than expected

Cold behaves like water - it flows downhill and collects where you least want it.

Post-Processing Workflow

Given the limited data, processing was kept simple and efficient.

Affinity Photo

  • Stacked 17 light frames
  • Curves and levels to restore colour balance and exposure

Siril

  • Background extraction
  • Plate solving
  • SSPC colour calibration
  • Veralux Hypermetric Stretch
  • Cosmic Clarity denoise
  • Cosmic Clarity sharpening

Final Touches

  • Minor contrast and colour tweaks back in Affinity Photo

I’ll share a more detailed workflow later this week.


Final Thoughts: Lessons From a Difficult Night

Not every astrophotography session is a triumph - but every one teaches something.

If you have thoughts on:

  • What I may have done wrong during mount setup?
  • Why the ASIAIR behaved unpredictably?
  • What might have caused the power failures?

… please leave a comment below. I’d love to hear your insights.

Thanks for stopping by. I hope you found this post useful, reassuring, or at least relatable.

Clear skies, stay safe, and happy astrophotography,
Steve 🌌


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