I didnt realize the following: You read in images from the two wedges collected with the same crystal orientation.
mydata_1_###.img mydata_101_###.img Now when you index ,if you say use images from both "datasets" mydata_1_###.img use image 1,90 mydata_101_###.img use image 30 , 120 The matrix for the second wedge (mydata_101_###.img) is still marked unknown? Isnt this different from the behaviour in the X- mosflm . SHould the matrixes be the same since the orientation was calculated using images from both. Now , If I did not force the second wedge to have the same matrix , using the save to file and read from file method you just described , does the new imosflm use the last calculated matrix from the running session or calculate a new matrix ?..I guess I have to check some of the data I processed with my erroneous assumption to make sure that the matrixes for the two wedges are the same . Thanks for clarifying this.. hari On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:13 AM, Andrew Leslie<and...@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk> wrote: > Dear Tom, > > There is a straightforward way to do what you want. It is > probably simplest to start by reading in only the images from the first > segment (0-180). Then do the indexing, cell refinement and integration in > the usual way. > > Then read in the second segment of data. You will notice that in this second > segment, underneath the Sector name, there is a line starting "Matrix" and > this will be "Unknown". If you go to the Matrix line of the first segment, > the matrix will have a name (based on the image template). Double click on > the name of the matrix. A popup window (Matrix properties) will appear. > Click on the "save matrix file" icon (a blue disc) and save the matrix with > an appropriate filename. > > Now go to the Matrix line of the second segment, double click (on Unknown) > as before and this time click on the "Open matrix file" icon (a folder) and > read in the matrix that you saved from the first sector. You can now process > the second segment using this matrix. > > It would be even nicer if you could "drag and drop" the matrix, this is on > our "to do" list. > > Best wishes, > > Andrew > > On 17 Aug 2009, at 13:33, Brett, Thomas wrote: > >> I am an imosflm novice and have a relatively simple question. I have a 360 >> deg data set collected in two swathes of 180 deg (one with phi=0 and omega >> going 0-180 and the second with phi = 180 and omega going 0-180). What is >> the easiest way to process the two datasets using a matching orientation >> matrix (or one rotated by 180 deg as it were) so that all the data can be >> merged together. Is there an easy way to do it in imosflm or must one >> process the two sets separately and then manipulate later with pointless >> before scalling and merging everything together? >> Thanks in advance. >> -Tom >> >> Tom J. Brett, PhD >> Assistant Professor of Medicine >> Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care >> Washington University School of Medicine >> Campus Box 8052, 660 S. Euclid >> Saint Louis, MO 63110 >