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Hi All, I am renovating a wide angle eyepiece system and found that
the cement between one of the achromats had developed many bubbles. I soaked the lens in acetone for a couple of days and succeeded in dissolving the old cement. Could anyone tell me what kind of cement to use to re-attach the two components. I have some Canada Balsam which is fairly old (about 35 years) but think that there must be something better to use by now. Thanks Brian Morse Vancouver. |
#2
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Balsam still works fine and is probably the best replacement in terms of
matching the original performance. Clear Skies Chuck Taylor Do you observe the moon? Try http://groups.yahoo.com/group/lunar-observing/ Are you interested in understanding optics? Try http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ATM_Optics_Software/ ************************************ "brian morse" wrote in message om... Hi All, I am renovating a wide angle eyepiece system and found that the cement between one of the achromats had developed many bubbles. I soaked the lens in acetone for a couple of days and succeeded in dissolving the old cement. Could anyone tell me what kind of cement to use to re-attach the two components. I have some Canada Balsam which is fairly old (about 35 years) but think that there must be something better to use by now. Thanks Brian Morse Vancouver. |
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#4
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Edmund has five+ cements...
brian morse wrote: Hi All, I am renovating a wide angle eyepiece system and found that the cement between one of the achromats had developed many bubbles. I soaked the lens in acetone for a couple of days and succeeded in dissolving the old cement. Could anyone tell me what kind of cement to use to re-attach the two components. I have some Canada Balsam which is fairly old (about 35 years) but think that there must be something better to use by now. Thanks Brian Morse Vancouver. |
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have some Canada Balsam which
is fairly old (about 35 years) but Cana Balsam is about as good as it gets but I would like to hear from the experts associated with this group. To review there are three advantages. 1 softens in hot water. 2. water soluable for easy cleanup. 3.non-dispersive refractive index. |
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#7
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Canada Balsam is what has been the commercial/scientific standard for gluing
optics together for a long time. One of the things that is nice about it is that it is dissovable so repairs can be made. More modern adhesives (UV curable adhesives) are a lot more difficult in the regards to repairability and are not as recommended for large optics due to the lack of flex when in the joint to be glued together. -- Why isn't there an Ozone Hole at the NORTH Pole? |
#8
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Balsam is not a good choice as it takes too long to cure.
I believe Balsam hardens upon cooling because it softens again upon heating implying that there are no irrevesable reactions taking place. |
#9
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Just to keep things in perspective, I sent this in about a month ago. I
thought my PC was going nuts because I kept looking for it and it never showed up. |
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