Update.It does not seem to be so simple a solution as we thought. No matter how I stack the flat frames I can not get a decent calibration. And I do not think they are flipped. The scratch marks that can be seen in the upper right corner are there. And they move. But not simply by rotation. They move across horizontally and sometimes you can see other scratches on the lower half of the frame.I inspected 30 flat frames from their FTP-server and they vary a lot in brightness. All have the same streaks but the vignetting is all over the place and not at all uniform.I rcvd a confirmation from iTelescope that they are checking the data but still no response after that.regardsMats
Your last message nails what I believed had been the issue. Indeed, as a courtesy, we do a 180° rotation on images from post-meridian, so that all images are oriented the same direction.If you are doing your own calibration, then you must rotate either the uncalibrated west side images, or the calibration files prior to applying them to west side images. In fact, in this instance, the last EAST image (-009) also needed rotating.The "pattern" you see is indeed an optical aberration in the system that can be "flatted out". The reason you were seeing it remaining in your image, and in symmetrical mirrored locations, is that your East side images calibrated correctly, while the west side ones did not. The west side calibrated images showed the original pattern (the flat didn't eliminate it, since it was rotated 180°), and at the symmetrical location, the un-rotated flat backed out an aberration that "wasn't really there", thus creating a NEW aberration.In addition, your dark files were upside down, likely leaving your west side images not only streaked, but lousy with hot and cold pixels.I used CCD Stack to calibrate your uncalibrated images, with master calibration files I created from the raw calibration files, and got a very good result. The data is excellent, and I think you'll find that if you work as above (easiest way is to probably just rotate the uncalibrated light frames back, and let Pixi handle the stacking its own way), you'll get great results as well.Please let me know if you have any additional questions.Best Regards,Jeff WoodsiTelescope.Net Imaging Specialist