Hi,
Thanks for the kind words.
The view through the scope gives good contrast as you woulsd expect from a scope of this focal length and with light baffles. It suffers at high magnification though. I suspect that the figure on the mirror is not quite there.
In Henrys article he describes the view through it, and basically says the same as me.
The history of the mirror is quite intersting, it was used at the Northern Argus for many decades to mix ink on, remember seeing it as a young boy. I suspect the scope was dismantled by Henry because the original construction from deal board would have splt and cracked after a few years. Deal board is basically planks of timber about 10mm thick.
The other reason I know it's his mirror for sure, is in his letter to the English Mechanic, he described how he made the mirror and turned down the mirror blank on a peddle lathe. he says he left a step turned in the outer diam.
This step is still there!
My father sold the mirror to a chap called Lance Catford, he planned to use the mirror in his own scope. He had it recoated sometime in the early 1980's. Unfortunately Lance died before he finished, and to cut a long story short I evetually purchsed the mirror back in 2003 .
The scope has an interesting feature, that todays scopes could do with.
A fold out mirror cell, saves demounting the mirror for cleaning.
The other thing wou will notice, is the strange black tower on the base this has a pulley and chain setup. It's an early R.A. tracking system for alt az telescopes, again this is from EM.
Cheers,
Justin.
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