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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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To silver part of a standard mercury discharge lamp for use as a video
projector bulb, presumably less screen illumination , but 15 foot diagonal not necessary. No evacuation chamber available. Ideas so far, aluminium cooking foil , cut to a ribbon, and wound around; ground-off front and back of a photo-flood light bulb and fixed over as a collar; any other ideas? -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#2
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N_Cook wrote:
To silver part of a standard mercury discharge lamp for use as a video projector bulb, presumably less screen illumination , but 15 foot diagonal not necessary. No evacuation chamber available. Ideas so far, aluminium cooking foil , cut to a ribbon, and wound around; ground-off front and back of a photo-flood light bulb and fixed over as a collar; any other ideas? -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ Google Brashear Process It's an old Amateur Telescope Maker's recipe I used it 50 years ago You need Silver Nitrate Ammonium Hydroxide Glucose A supply of de-ionized water at that time (1950-60) every good sized town had a shop that Re-silvered mirrors. They used a two-component Sprayer to flood the glass surface with a Silver-ammonium complex and co-reacted it with a Glucose solution to reduce the silver solution to metallic silver, which plated out on the glass. It's messy, really requires a fume hood, waste disposal problems, can be an explosion hazard. I did it in a kitchen sink as a teen-ager! Silver cost about $.50 an ounce then. Through my employers, I graduated to Evacuation Chambers and Sputter Coaters and learned to coat with aluminum, tungsten, platinum, gold, carbon. I think ~10-25 pound sterling would get you the necessary chemicals and glass-ware plus a bag of Kitty-litter for waste disposal, less if you are good at scrounging. EG. you could buy "Fine Silver" from a Lapidary Shop, Glucose as a food suppliment, Potassium Nitrate as fertilizer, Sulfuric Acid from a Car Battery shop. Yukio YANO Saskatoon , Saskatchewan Canada |
#3
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Yukio YANO wrote in message
... N_Cook wrote: To silver part of a standard mercury discharge lamp for use as a video projector bulb, presumably less screen illumination , but 15 foot diagonal not necessary. No evacuation chamber available. Ideas so far, aluminium cooking foil , cut to a ribbon, and wound around; ground-off front and back of a photo-flood light bulb and fixed over as a collar; any other ideas? -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ Google Brashear Process It's an old Amateur Telescope Maker's recipe I used it 50 years ago You need Silver Nitrate Ammonium Hydroxide Glucose A supply of de-ionized water at that time (1950-60) every good sized town had a shop that Re-silvered mirrors. They used a two-component Sprayer to flood the glass surface with a Silver-ammonium complex and co-reacted it with a Glucose solution to reduce the silver solution to metallic silver, which plated out on the glass. It's messy, really requires a fume hood, waste disposal problems, can be an explosion hazard. I did it in a kitchen sink as a teen-ager! Silver cost about $.50 an ounce then. Through my employers, I graduated to Evacuation Chambers and Sputter Coaters and learned to coat with aluminum, tungsten, platinum, gold, carbon. I think ~10-25 pound sterling would get you the necessary chemicals and glass-ware plus a bag of Kitty-litter for waste disposal, less if you are good at scrounging. EG. you could buy "Fine Silver" from a Lapidary Shop, Glucose as a food suppliment, Potassium Nitrate as fertilizer, Sulfuric Acid from a Car Battery shop. Yukio YANO Saskatoon , Saskatchewan Canada Ta, an amateur astronomer's page now only on archive.org http://web.archive.org/web/200406040...no-ip.com/atm/ -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
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