Henry Lomb was a cabinetmaker, and so am I at times. I cobbled together this little box from a piece of firewood I identified as from a sycamore tree. It is made to fit some of my extra eyepieces.
As you can see the mechanism is quite simple. A painted sheet of perforated plywood rests on these corner blocks, and the eyepieces fit through the holes. I think a hinged glass lid might be a good finisher.
Eyepiece case
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Eyepiece case
1942 Bausch and Lomb Series T Dynoptic, Custom Illumination
Re: Eyepiece case
Looks good. I occasionally engage in some wood butchery; microscopy-ish related I made a case to hold my pinned flies. Nothing fancy, but utilitarian.
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Re: Eyepiece case
Nice job Bram . I made mine in a drawer. I bought some of that tubular foam pipe insulation and made compartments to hold each eyepiece. It looks nice but in time, it doesn't have enough space for the eyepieces I have now acquired. Simple is usually better. Greg
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Re: Eyepiece case
The thought of burning Sycamore wood makes me shudder.
Re: Eyepiece case
Very good job on the dovetail joints, and you cobbled these together?
Regards.. George
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- Posts: 1546
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Re: Eyepiece case
Oh sure. I do dovetails the old fashioned way, which is to say I favor speed over neatness so they are freehanded mostly. A 1 inch Forstner bit makes a perfect hole for an eyepiece (1-1/4 for 30mm).
I recently made a pair of stages, one from cherry and the other a laminate of plywood and sheet aluminum. Works ok.
I recently made a pair of stages, one from cherry and the other a laminate of plywood and sheet aluminum. Works ok.
1942 Bausch and Lomb Series T Dynoptic, Custom Illumination