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Thread: My Microscope
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02-10-2010, 10:57 AM #1
My Microscope
I was recently looking for a small microscope on ebay and found this thing. I got it for less than twenty dollars. There was only one pic of it so I guess everyone was suspicious of it. It has a patent date of 1915 and it is really heavy. Must weigh 12 to 15 pounds.
I put on rubber gloves and cleaned it with alcahol. I removed everything. I even took out the lenses and cleaned them.
It has two 25 X lenses and one 60X lens. I put a razor under it that I tried shaving with. The razor was just ok and needed a little more work to be really sharp.
When I looked at the edge under the 25X, I was amazed. There were nicks and the edge looked like a saw. And I thought the thing was sharp.
Needless to say. I am very pleased with the microscope. I am on cloud nine. Wow. What a stroke of luck.
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02-10-2010, 11:09 AM #2
Gratz on the find and for the right price as well!!! enjoy your new toy
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02-10-2010, 01:40 PM #3
Lucky find. You'd be amazed what you notice with a magnifier and microscope.
əˌfisyəˈnädō | pərˈfekSH(ə)nəst | eS'prəSSo | düvəl ləvər
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02-10-2010, 02:41 PM #4
Hi mackie,
Nice scope. Have you seen this Zorb digital microscope available at Amazon. Looks pretty cool.
Amazon.com: Carson Zorb USB Digital Microscope with 35X Optical Zoom, Safari Green: Camera & Photo
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02-11-2010, 11:31 AM #5
I looked at all of my razors under my microscope and found the worst one. I then went back to the stones starting with my 6000 and re worked it and kept checking it under the scope. Now it is really in good shape. I can only say I wish I would have had this thing a long time ago.. I have a 20x optivisor but it was not nearly strong enough to see what I am seeing now. Incredible !
After honing, I checked it and then stroped it and the strop cleaned up the edge even more. The canvas didn't seem to do anything at all but the leather did. I am going to do a little more experimentation with the canvas but I don't think I am even going to fool with the canvas any more unless I can see some improvement from it.
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02-11-2010, 01:15 PM #6
Beautiful
Mackie,
That is an absolutely beautiful machine. Thanks for posting. Now I know before I start honing that I need one of these.
Cheers
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02-11-2010, 01:55 PM #7
Well, you don't actually need one but it sure has helped me .
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02-11-2010, 03:27 PM #8
great find! Its very similar in age and desighn to the old one that I use. A couple of things that may help if you are new to using a 'scope...
1. the lenses you mention (25X and 60X) are called the objective lenses. The one at the top that you look through is the occular lens (commonly 6X or 10X) and the overall magnification is the multiplied product of the two (ie: 10X 25 = 250 times). I only ever seem to need to use the smaller lens.
2. To save the lenses and your blades, develop the habit of only moving the carriage down significant distances when you are not looking through the scope... ie: take your eye away and watch from the side so you don't ram the lens into the blade. then put your eye back up to the scope and bring the carriage up until things are in focus.
3. Focusing on the edge when looking straight onto it (ie blade pointy side up) is trickier than looking at the side of the blade, but I find it usefull as a sharp shave ready edge appears as nothing more than a very fine line with no visible width to it. If you can see any width then that part of the blade needs more work.
4. This style of scope is designed for looking through translucent slides with light from below (which doesn't work for our application). You need light from above. I use a bright desk lamp at night but find a table in bright daylight near a window works best.
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02-11-2010, 04:41 PM #9
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02-11-2010, 05:09 PM #10
A lot of good info. The occular lens is a 10x. Thanks. This thing is a really great toy.
Last edited by mackie; 02-11-2010 at 05:13 PM.