Results 11 to 16 of 16
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09-14-2009, 05:28 PM #11
Pyment-
Those microscopes are transmission scopes, used for cellular microscopy and such, and will not show the bevel of a razor. Also, good scopes at this magnification are very, very expensive- the optics in these are likely to be a little wonky. The advantage of the cheapie toy scopes is that they are all reflective, and therefore illuminate from above the objective.
You might look into good stereo dissection scopes, or other scopes that have the light source above the stage.
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09-14-2009, 05:56 PM #12
The 44302 claims
The microscope is ideally suited for examining objects such as coins, stamps, rocks, relics, insects, plants, gems, circuit boards, various materials, skin, and many other objects. Also, you can examine specimen slides at low and high powers.Top and bottom electric illuminationThis was a gift for our son-in-law. He was very happy with it and has already been using it. He uses it to look at bugs, leaves, small flowers, etc.
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09-14-2009, 10:21 PM #13
The "top illumination" is a light pen... you need powerful, diffuse light at 600x +. Something like this.
It might seem ridiculous, but I promise you, this thing is WAY to cheap to work effectively....
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09-14-2009, 10:36 PM #14
- Join Date
- Mar 2009
- Posts
- 254
Thanked: 45The 44302 Celestron will do just fine if looking at honing is what you're after. The price is very nice; when I bought my Veho (see first post in this thread), that model was about $80. The Veho goes to 200x, but you can always zoom a photo from the Celestron and should receive similar results; both are 1.3 megapixel.
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09-14-2009, 11:30 PM #15
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09-15-2009, 07:08 AM #16
There's one possible problem that might or might not apply for biological microscopes (I fiddled with one when I was kind. Long time ago) : Light source and direction. Some of those things are designed to be used so that the light comes underneath through the material. I don't think this would work with steel. However, that model does have a electrical illumination above as well, but that means always sticking that pen there for illumination. You can decide if that's a problem.
They look good otherwise