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Unable to find image IMG_20240131_170731472_1.jpg Unable to find image IMG_20240131_172405688_1.jpg To give a circle of glass (approximately) the right curve for a telescope mirro,, I want to make a precisely shaped mold that can withstand kiln temperatures. This technique makes what’s called a meniscus mirror.
Last time I tried this, the wood delaminated and came apart at the boundary where one plank was glued to another. This time, I’m spraying the wood with polyurethane spray on both the front AND back side, to avoid any warping before I put the furnace cement in.
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After all that setup, actually polishing a mirror is surprisingly simple. First you put your mirror on your tool and apply pressure so the pitch flows and takes the shape of your mirror (which happens faster if it’s hot, so you can leave the pitch lap in hot water to heat it up and speed up pressing). Then you take your mirror, put it on your tool, and push it back and forth without applying any downwards pressure.
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Unable to find image IMG_20240127_141903995_1_1.jpg Unable to find image IMG_20240127_153114171_HDR_1.jpg After all that setup, actually polishing a mirror is surprisingly simple. First you put your mirror on your tool and apply pressure so the pitch flows and takes the shape of your mirror (which happens faster if it’s hot, so you can leave the pitch lap in hot water to heat it up and speed up pressing). Then you take your mirror, put it on your tool, and push it back and forth without applying any downwards pressure.
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| 2 min
| 349 words
I’m making a tool called a pitch lap to grind an 8" mirror. Previously, I discovered the best way to find dental stone is a dentist, and made a yellow plaster disk.
Pitch lap step 2: Pour the pitch!
Pitch is a weird material. It’s a liquid so viscous it looks like a solid. At high temperature it’ll pour like honey, at low temperature it’ll act solid but very very slowly flow.
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Unable to find image IMG_20231216_141319656_HDR_1.jpg Unable to find image image.png Unable to find image image.png Unable to find image image.png I’m making a tool called a pitch lap to grind an 8" mirror. Previously, I discovered the best way to find dental stone is a dentist, and made a yellow plaster disk.
Pitch lap step 2: Pour the pitch!
Pitch is a weird material. It’s a liquid so viscous it looks like a solid.
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Previously, @Beasmeeply generously donated me an 8" mirror blank, kick-starting an attempt to finish grinding it and make an 8" telescope. There are four stages of mirror grinding, so to figure out which step I needed to start with, I put the mirror into a Foucault mirror tester, and it gave a smooth-ish image, telling me BeasMeeply had gotten through the first two stages of mirror making, rough and fine grinding, and it was ready to polish.
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Unable to find image IMG_20231202_150448568_HDR_1.jpg Unable to find image IMG_20231207_160216875_1.jpg Unable to find image IMG_20231207_162328078_1.jpg Unable to find image IMG_20231207_170016712_1.jpg Previously, @Beasmeeply generously donated me an 8" mirror blank, kick-starting an attempt to finish grinding it and make an 8" telescope. There are four stages of mirror grinding, so to figure out which step I needed to start with, I put the mirror into a Foucault mirror tester, and it gave a smooth-ish image, telling me BeasMeeply had gotten through the first two stages of mirror making, rough and fine grinding, and it was ready to polish.
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| 1 min
| 137 words
This is the best photo I’ve made of the Andromeda galaxy!
It’s my second time stacking pictures to bring out faint details. You’re looking at 20 phone pics taken through my 3D printed telescope, each 1/2s exposure so the Earth didn’t rotate as much during the photo and smear the stars. I tried the program deepskystacker, but it failed to stack my pictures (maybe my phone camera’s pics had too much noise?
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The first picture is at 36x zoom, the second one at 150x zoom. The more zoomed in one is fainter because the same light is spread across more area, but you can see the four trapezium stars as four separate streaks!
This was a very frustrating night for photography because finding things in a big sky is hard. Light pollution made it hard to see M31, I couldn’t find M33, and then finally clouds rolled in and it became a race against time to photograph the Orion nebula M42.
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