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Hi,
I am a college student and I am considering making my own mirror, I was wondering how hard it would be to create a 8" F/5 mirror from a pyrex blank, I understand that it would take a great deal of time, but is there a good chance that I could never do it? -Aaron Smith |
#2
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heywood floyd wrote:
Hi, I am a college student and I am considering making my own mirror, I was wondering how hard it would be to create a 8" F/5 mirror from a pyrex blank, I understand that it would take a great deal of time, but is there a good chance that I could never do it? You should be able to. Some web sites: http://astro.umsystem.edu/atm/ http://home.clara.net/smunch/tele3.html http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/drmac/Scope/theory.html http://members.shaw.ca/fvas2/ And there are many more. Phil |
#3
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heywood floyd wrote:
Hi, I am a college student and I am considering making my own mirror, I was wondering how hard it would be to create a 8" F/5 mirror from a pyrex blank, I understand that it would take a great deal of time, but is there a good chance that I could never do it? -Aaron Smith I would go f/D=6 because f/D=5 is tough for a first mirror. Actually f/D=8 is a nice first mirror while f/D=6 can get crazy at the end. I think that Jean Texereau's "How to Make a Telescope" is very hard to beat. Look it over. His instructions work. You need to be mechanically handy. You need a clean work area. Grinding through fine grinding could be done in a day but most of us couldn't do it in a day. A week to two weeks is fine. You can use fast polishers like cerium oxide. You can get a really nice seeming polish in maybe 8 hours or less. Finish polishing with rouge. Polish with rouge until the orange peel in the foucault test goes away. Figure with rouge. Don't give up when it takes 50 hours or 100 hours or 200 hours to figure. It takes a while to learn what the glass does. First mirrors are like that. If you consider your labor free and the idea of making a mirror appeals to you then do it. It can be fun and you can point with pride at your workmanship. Chuck P.S. Some say that you can test a Pyrex mirror 2 to 4 hours after doing a figuring operation. I was not pleased with this and found work proceeded better if I allowed 6 to 8 hours before testing. The longer the better. -- ... The times have been, That, when the brains were out, the man would die. ... Macbeth Chuck Simmons |
#4
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It took me about 40 hours of work to do my first mirror. That was a 8" F7.5
and I did a very nice job. The boring parts are getting the hole dug in the beginning and polishing the mirror before figuring it. There are a lot of websites that describe grinding and polishing mirors and a quick search on Google will show a whole bunch. The 8" size is a nice size to start with. -- Bob May Losing weight is easy! If you ever want to lose weight, eat and drink less. Works evevery time it is tried! |
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