Re: Soldering station thoughts and guidelines
@Danny
No the microscope came with one set of eyepieces which are 10/20x
I am pretty certain the following info is correct, unless I misunderstood it
With the 10/20x eyepieces and the protective glass (effectively 1x Objective) fitted to the bottom of the microscope you have 7x-45x magnification (zoom)
With the 10/20x and the 0.5x Barlow Objective lens you get 3.5x-22.5x magnification
With the 10/20x and the 2.0x Barlow Objective you get 14x-90x magnification
I have also seen the same microscope heads include 20/10x eyepieces and using 20/10x with the 2x Barlow Objective you get 28x-180x magnification. So with all options included you get a total 3.5x-180x range
Quite why the eyepieces are called 10/20x and 20/10x (which apparently gives twice the magnification) I honestly don't know
From my observations so far the best configuration for soldering is 3.5x-22.5x as I seem to find myself using the lowest available magnification - and in retrospect I am considering adding a 0.3x Barlow objective which would presumably give 2.33x-15x which could be even better and I would expect also increases the working distance.
The working distance is about 10cm with the 0.5x Barlow but I will do some video showing the working distance while soldering and upload it when I get chance. With 0.3x Barlow I suspect that is more like 15cm. Hopefully someone else can advise on that.
I also think I have solved with the problem wearing glasses. I am longsighted and also astigmatic. My close up vision is very bad.
It turns out (not suprisingly) that microscope manufacturers know all about this problem
http://zeiss-campus.magnet.fsu.edu/a...rgonomics.html
and produce special high eyepoint eyepieces to resolve it
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Pair-Ster....c100677.m4598
Look at the symbol on the eyepiece - it says 10/20x and has a eyeglasses icon!
Also as a bonus with high eyepoint eyepieces you apparently get an even wider field of view!!
I've asked my vendor if he can supply these for me so I know 100% they will fit the microscope - otherwise I should have no problem getting them elsewhere as they seem fairly standard items and they are not stupidly expensive either
If i knew all this before I would have asked for the microscope to be supplied with just the 0.5x Barlow (or maybe even 0.3x), the 0.5x tube and the high eyepoint eyepieces and probably saved a few euros
Live and learn.... but I am more than happy to pass my findings on
@Danny
No the microscope came with one set of eyepieces which are 10/20x
I am pretty certain the following info is correct, unless I misunderstood it
With the 10/20x eyepieces and the protective glass (effectively 1x Objective) fitted to the bottom of the microscope you have 7x-45x magnification (zoom)
With the 10/20x and the 0.5x Barlow Objective lens you get 3.5x-22.5x magnification
With the 10/20x and the 2.0x Barlow Objective you get 14x-90x magnification
I have also seen the same microscope heads include 20/10x eyepieces and using 20/10x with the 2x Barlow Objective you get 28x-180x magnification. So with all options included you get a total 3.5x-180x range
Quite why the eyepieces are called 10/20x and 20/10x (which apparently gives twice the magnification) I honestly don't know
From my observations so far the best configuration for soldering is 3.5x-22.5x as I seem to find myself using the lowest available magnification - and in retrospect I am considering adding a 0.3x Barlow objective which would presumably give 2.33x-15x which could be even better and I would expect also increases the working distance.
The working distance is about 10cm with the 0.5x Barlow but I will do some video showing the working distance while soldering and upload it when I get chance. With 0.3x Barlow I suspect that is more like 15cm. Hopefully someone else can advise on that.
I also think I have solved with the problem wearing glasses. I am longsighted and also astigmatic. My close up vision is very bad.
It turns out (not suprisingly) that microscope manufacturers know all about this problem
http://zeiss-campus.magnet.fsu.edu/a...rgonomics.html
and produce special high eyepoint eyepieces to resolve it
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Pair-Ster....c100677.m4598
Look at the symbol on the eyepiece - it says 10/20x and has a eyeglasses icon!
Also as a bonus with high eyepoint eyepieces you apparently get an even wider field of view!!
I've asked my vendor if he can supply these for me so I know 100% they will fit the microscope - otherwise I should have no problem getting them elsewhere as they seem fairly standard items and they are not stupidly expensive either
If i knew all this before I would have asked for the microscope to be supplied with just the 0.5x Barlow (or maybe even 0.3x), the 0.5x tube and the high eyepoint eyepieces and probably saved a few euros
Live and learn.... but I am more than happy to pass my findings on
However, it was suggested pointing the laser at the stage, not up through the optical path, so the idea was alright. A simple screen has the upper-hand in this regard, but it's a lot more difficult to implement since it'd have to be pretty bright, since it doesn't actually "project" anything, so it would require lenses and mirrors and junk to place it in the optical path somehow...
Comment