Hi Lars,
I'm glad the process worked for you.
Flats can go wrong several ways:
- Something changed in the optical setup, like new dust has accumulated that wasn't accounted for between when the flats and lights were taken. This could also be something like the orientation of the camera relative to the optical system has changed, although if the problem is specific to dust donuts then orientation isn't the most likely cause.
- If not all your temperature, ISO and binning settings changed between flats, lights, darks, etc. Some cameras are affected by ambient temperature differences even if the sensor probe registers the same value between lights, flats, and darks, assuming the camera has temperature regulation. Cameras that don't have temperature regulation are very difficult to calibrate well and most people rely on building libraries of darks and bias at various temperatures and ISOs so they can select what matches any given flat or light the best.
- The flat field device used provides uneven illumination. If you were collecting good calibration data before and suddenly these are off then it is possible that something went wrong with the flat field acquisition setup.
Regards,
David