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
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