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I don't think a barn door tracker works this way. |
In an attempt to get longer exposures of deep space objects, I decided to build a barn door tracker. This would help track the stars so there is no trailing created by the rotation of the earth, The general concept behind the tracker is that the camera is mounted on a hinge, and the axis of the hinge is pointed toward the celestial pole (the apparent axis of rotation for the earth; it's near the star Polaris in the norther hemispehere). The hinge would rotate at the same rate as the earth, so to the camera the stars appear to be fixed in place. About a month ago I tried making a hand-cranked one, but there many severe problems with it. I didn't have a second ball head, so I couldn't aim the camera, and the setup lacked any rigidity, so any attempt to compensate for the rotation of the earth was negated by the wobble created by my hand. Not to mention I didn't have a real way to properly align with the celestial pole.