Then I tried M51 with autoguide. The guidestars were way too much off-focus and the guide stars have spread into a square of 3-4mm wide.
PHD was still able to calibrate and track with RMS about 0.28 to 0.48 depending on seeing.
Then I autoguided M51 successfully for about 10 odd guided exposure of 5-min each.
Next time I shall re-focus the Lodestar manually, so that I could use dimmer guide stars (too defocused to see at all).
I could see only 2 defocused brighter guided stars last night for 980mm main scope.
The biggest challenge, was go-to. The T-Point model with 10 odd mapped stars still showed great discrepancy.
Sync stars would not be a problem since the electronic finder (8 x 5 degree) could always locate the stars after slewing.
But for small & faint nebula, the electronic finder was too big and could not see them even in 10 sec exposure.
Thus go-to has become a matter of guess work for the small imaging FOV of 32 x 24 arc sec.
Remote imaging's biggest advantage is to give me some free time at home with family members.
They just treat me as if I am surfing in front of the computer and not away from home

Raymond