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On Aug 27, 8:07 am, "jamesgangnc" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Aug 26, 10:52 pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:31:21 -0700 (PDT), wrote: Progress while waiting for Fay to go away. Finished rough grinding yielding a focal length of 24" (this is a 100 mm diameter f 6 mirror) and finished the #120 grit and have started on the #180. My magnifications will be a low of 15 X an a high of about 30X. How do you know when you have the shape just right? What do use as a blank? At this stage, one simply uses a depth micrometer (or more simply a feeler guage under a straight edge) to measure the depth of the "bowl". The one grinds the "tool" (another glass blank) against the mirror in such a way that they naturally form a concave and convex spherical surface. Later, to change from spherical to paraboloidal, one uses an amazingly simply shadow test called the Focault test to measure the figure errors. It is so amazing that this actually works and was figured out over a hundred years ago. My father-in-law does this as well. Surprisingly (to me anyway) hand ground mirrors are amazingly accurate. Because if the randomness of a human doing it. So much so that duplicating the level of precision with manufacturing machinery is quite difficult. As I recall it's also very messy and time consuming. You sit with a piece of thick round glass in your lap and dish it out by hand using various grit sizes of compound and another piece of thick round glass as a tool. Once you finish, you send the glass off to have the mirror coat applied. On the smaller sizes if you apply a value to your time it's cheaper to buy a telescope. On bigger sizes like 8 or higher you can save a fair amount of money making your own mirror. Of course there is the satisfaction of knowing you made it your self. For a boat I might try one of the cradle style. My daughter has a 4 inch one. You can take it out of the socket and just sit the ball in your lap. http://www.telescopes.com/telescopes...pes/tasco30x76... I know, I can buy one for less than what my time is worth. I just wanna do it for the love of optics and math. However, I can relate this to boating even more. In one of the Patrick Obrien books, Jack Aubrey grinds a telescope mirror being tutored by Lady Herschel if I remember right. He uses the "Finest Pomeranian Sludge" for polishing whatever that means. At that time, they were still making such mirrors from metal because they either couldnt polish the glass well enough or they couldnt make a front surface mirror. I remember from somewhere that the best metal for this was called "Bell metal". In a later Jack Aubrey book, he attempts to rig his telescope from the ships rigging in such a way that it stays oriented regardless of the ships rolling in order to view the moons of Jupiter using them as a timepeice to avoid the need for a chronomator. This didnt work in the book as it did not work in real life. I think the reason was that they had to use very long focal length telescopes because they did not have the Foucault test for parabolizing a mirror and the diff tween a sphere and parabola for long focal lengths is minimal. Long focal lengths mean high magnification so any movement of the ship would be magnified. |
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