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From: Bill (no email)
Date: Tue Apr 18 2006 - 18:39:16 EDT
> Furthermore, I know of a few techniques for adjusting the index mirror for
> perpendicularity, including the eyeball method and placing objects (such as a
> pair of dominos) of exactly the same height at opposite ends of the sextant
> limb but it seems to me that these methods are rather coarse and not nearly as
> precise as those for reckoning index and side errors.
>
> Any comments on this most fundamental topic are welcome.
Robert
When I first obtained my Astra with front-silvered index mirror, I went
through the process. (I had not yet obtained the matched brass cylinders.)
All the dominos I could find were too big (double size). I took a
micrometer to dice and other objects about the right size but they were not
a close enough match. A little starter kit of Lego blocks (a few bucks at a
toy store) were the solution.
I mixed and matched them on a flat surface (a 1/2"-thick piece of float
glass). You don't have to measure them, one can feel a difference of a
couple thousands of an inch. I got really anal with the best match (with a
few thousands difference) and slapped a piece of fine sandpaper face up on
the float glass and lapped the "high" Lego down for an exact match (within a
few ten thousandths).
That being done I placed the sextant on a flat surface (3/8" thick float
glass table top), placed the Legos on the arc, and measured from the table
top to the top of the blocks. A shim of two index cards under one leg made
both block tops equal height from the table top and level fore/aft and
port/starboard. (A little circular bubble level on the frame could work
too.)
Then I attached an index card to a small scrap block of wood (a base to hold
the card upright) and placed a pencil mark at the same height as the block
tops. I placed this on the table top between my eye and the sextant. That
gave me a reference mark to make certain my eye was aligned with the top of
the bricks.
NOTE: I needed a lot of light for this, to get enough depth of field in the
old eyeball to have both the index card and Lego in focus.
Seems to have worked.
Bill
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