I don't have your exact mount but if its anything like mine, not only must you set the Lat, Lon, but make sure your date and time and DST settings are accurate.
And I assume you have to mount mode set to polar not alt-az. Don't laugh, I had that problem once.
I assume you've walked thru the steps in the manual?
Doesn't that mount have a polar alignment scope built into the RA axis?
Another thing I do is after I think I am set, I've have it navigate to a bright star I know and if its slightly off I'll have it adjust with the hand set and then "Sync" on that corrected position. It remembers that correction and applies it to future Go-To's.
1.)Yes, date and time are asked during setup.
2.)No idea, I guess it is.
3.)Yes, I tried following the manual.
4.)Yes, there is a polar alignment scope in the mount.
5.)I understand if the stars are slightly off, but when I say way off, I mean way off (The star could be on the horizon, but the scope would point upwards. lol)
Any new pics Wab? Love the shots u take sir
Here are a couple of mine:
1.)Bad pic of M42(Orion Nebula)
2.)
3.)A composite of 103 single-frame exposures at 30 seconds each.
Wab~ thats very cool...I had a 4" once I lived on top of a mountain in NH,man I had crazy clear skys, I want to get a huge one like a 10" mirrior......I want to see andromada for some reason just lookin at anouther galexy shows you how small we are lol. the rings of saturn I could see....well I could see them but it look solid, I truly love checking out the night...you ever see moving stars? I did it was messed up. Lots of times, a small star would move from one to another at a extreme rate of speed,cover an inch or more of sky, in a less then a second.
Wab is right. Andromeda is a reasonably bright object. But were I'm from, I can't see it with the naked eye and it only looks like an extremely faint blob of grey through a really small scope.
As for your moving stars, they are most likely satellites. They look like airplanes, but without the blinking lights. They also vary in magnitude(brightness) as well. Every so often you might come across a "Satellite Flair", which is when a satellite with a dim magnitude crosses the path of the sun at a certain angle and it gradually gets extremely bright, then it dims again.
Here is a pic I took that shows Cassiopeia and Andromeda galaxy(circled in red in second pic) (Sorry, for small pic)