Dear Graham! I found a Bardou & Son, Paris 3 inch telescope. Seems it has the same cell type. But I could not get the cell pushed out of the main tube.
Hello Graham! i found 3 old british brass telescopes here in Germany , one of Dollond, one Scout scope from WW2, and a very long ( 4 ft.) 114 cm with a wooden body. no engravings on it. Never seen such a long 4 draw brass scope. Have you any idea?
Hi Mike, I agree that is a long tube and I wonder if the image suffers as a result. Normally the ones I've seen are less than 100cm. Just for comparison there are some examples with descriptions on this site: www.scientificcollectables.com/page_telescopes.htm
@@JenhamsAstro Thank you. It must be an old naval scope i think. it has a 68mm front objectiv lens.and a wooden body. I found it in an antique shop in the german seaport Leer.
Dear Graham! i found an unsigned 18th century scope that looks like a Dollond scope. Does all early Dollond scopes have 2 achromatic lenses?mine has only one front lens.
Hi Mike, a good question which I am not expert enough to answer. Dollond was of course famous because of his patent for achromats, and their subsequent manufacture, but he was in business before this date. I’m not sure if he produced singlets in this period.
Well you could use the terrestrial eye piece for astronomy and I suppose it'd be similar to using a modern spotting scope for astronomy but you'd lose light when viewing faint astronomical objects due to passing through more glass.
4:10 Can I ask what type of grease is used on the focuser, please?
Dear Graham! I found a Bardou & Son, Paris 3 inch telescope. Seems it has the same cell type. But I could not get the cell pushed out of the main tube.
Hello Mike, that’s interesting. Is there another way of removing the lens? Perhaps it has a screw thread?
@@JenhamsAstro No screw thread . I will try to get it out with a small hammer pushing it out at the end of the lens cell. .
@@mikemopar9989 Care required!
Hi Graham. I have send you some pictures on UA-cam of the Bardou telescope!@@JenhamsAstro
Hello Graham! i found 3 old british brass telescopes here in Germany , one of Dollond, one Scout scope from WW2, and a very long ( 4 ft.) 114 cm with a wooden body. no engravings on it.
Never seen such a long 4 draw brass scope. Have you any idea?
Hi Mike, I agree that is a long tube and I wonder if the image suffers as a result. Normally the ones I've seen are less than 100cm. Just for comparison there are some examples with descriptions on this site: www.scientificcollectables.com/page_telescopes.htm
@@JenhamsAstro Thank you. It must be an old naval scope i think. it has a 68mm front objectiv lens.and a wooden body. I found it in an antique shop in the german seaport Leer.
Dear Graham! i found an unsigned 18th century scope that looks like a Dollond scope. Does all early Dollond scopes have 2 achromatic lenses?mine has only one front lens.
Hi Mike, a good question which I am not expert enough to answer. Dollond was of course famous because of his patent for achromats, and their subsequent manufacture, but he was in business before this date. I’m not sure if he produced singlets in this period.
Well you could use the terrestrial eye piece for astronomy and I suppose it'd be similar to using a modern spotting scope for astronomy but you'd lose light when viewing faint astronomical objects due to passing through more glass.
You can just remove the erector tube cartridge to make it astronomical.
Hi
Wow!!!!!
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