I think what one uses will depend on what one expects to be in the structure 
and the resolution and the quality of their diffraction data.

I usually start with 1.8 Å resolution data in case there is chance of having 
disulfides.  Then 1.9, then 2.4, then 2.0, then 2.6, then 2.2, then 1.85, then 
1.75, ….  If there are disulfides, then there is the DSUL option if the 
resolution of the diffraction data is not conducive to separating the 
individual sulfur atoms.

One should also change the number of sites that SHELXD is looking for, perhaps 
in a systematic way.  For example, one might be looking for sulfurs based on 
amino acid sequence, but there may be calcium, zinc, manganese, or other strong 
anomalous scattering atoms in the crystal that would make searching for sulfurs 
moot or at least problematic.

Jim

________________________________
From: CCP4 bulletin board [CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] on behalf of Monica Mittal 
[monica.mitta...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 22, 2014 3:13 AM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: [ccp4bb] shelxd

Dear all

I am naive in phasing experiments. CAn anyone please guide how to do the 
following:

In a S-SAD for SHELXD searches, try various high-resolution cutoffs for example 
2.5 to 5 Å in steps of 0.1 Å. Based on these attempts, use a high-resolution 
cutoff at for example 3.8 Å for substructure determination with an E min value 
of for example 1.6 to search for X no. of protein sulfur sites.

Thanx in advance
Monica

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