First I want to thank you guys for taking the time to talk through this with me.
We hadn't considered night flats. I'll read up on this. Note that we are not using flat darks, we're using the same darks used for calibrating our lights.
This is a large scope, we haven't found any type of EL panel specifically made for this size (we do have EL caps we can use for our RH 300's, but not for our 400mm RiFAST and 600mm RiLA). We instead use an LED TV, and play a "white movie" on it through VLC on an attached computer. We cannot mount it on the dome, as the domes are clamshells. Instead, we have it on a mini lift to bring it up so that we can point our scope horizontally at the screen. We use a sheet of diffuser paper over the screen to help even out the lighting. And we use brightness controls on the TV and in VLC to get it in range for each filter. We are targeting ADUs in the high 20 thousands (ranging from 27,000 - 29,000).
If anyone has any ideas on how to improve our flats within the limitations of our setup, we'd love to hear them. Especially if we could remotely control the process (really just the light source, as everything else is already automated).
That said, I did do some more sleuthing. I've found some answers, and am left with some questions. As I said, we have flats from both Jan 12 and Jan 20. All our subs were shot in between. I created Lum stacks from each of the four nights we shot, unregistered, so that any dust motes would add together and be easier to see. For each night I calibrated once with the Jan 12 flat, once with the Jan 20 flat. I found that I need to use the Jan 12 flat for subs shot on Jan 12 and 13, and I need to use the Jan 20 flat for subs shot on Jan 16 and Jan 18. That should at least solve most of the dust issues. Following are 4 comparison shots (all using PI boosted autostretch):
I then took the Jan 18 subs and calibrated in different combinations of flats, darks, bias. Here is a labeled screenshot showing all combinations, as well as the master flat used during calibration.
All .xisf files for all of these comparisons are in this folder:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1J3ZXsHzZXEezDu1Ok87y_cq2SgVdTGg8As you can imagine we would like the best calibration solution possible considering our circumstances. We spend a lot of time on acquisition, and a lot of time on processing, it's a shame to be handicapped at all.