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- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!att-out!cbnewsd!krod
- From: krod@cbnewsd.cb.att.com (craig.engelhorn)
- Subject: Re: Cleaning mirrors
- Organization: AT&T
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 21:23:46 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.212346.1785@cbnewsd.cb.att.com>
- References: <21187@acorn.co.uk>
- Lines: 74
-
-
-
- Cleaning aluminized optical surfaces is a tricky business. If you are careful,
- it can be done safely with minimal risk to your delicate surfaces.
- Since there is risk of damage to the surface every time you clean,
- don't rush to clean the optics just because one or two chunks of dust appear.
-
- The best advice is to store your telescope in such a way that dust may not fall
- on the surface. Cover the tube. Texereau suggests storing the mirror upside
- down so the "heavier, greasier" particles don't land on the surface at all.
- In any case, crud will accumulate and you will need to clean the optics to
- insure the best performance.
-
- You will need.
- A squeeze bulb, or compressed air can.
- Distilled water
- Detergent
- Cotton balls
-
- This is the technique I use, borrowed from an article in Astronomy Magazine
- March 1992 by Micheal Porcellino.
-
- 1> Take the mirror out of the telescope. Careful. Mark the mirror edge so you
- can replace it into the cell the same way it was before.
-
- 2> Use the can of compressed air (don't agitate it before use), or the squeeze
- bulb to blow off the big chunks. (Sounds like you have gone this far)
- Do not use a brush, and never drag anything dry across the mirror
- surface.
-
- 3> Use wet cotton balls to "lift" off any remaining large chunks. Do not wipe.
- Lift. Do not use pressure, just snag the chunks with cotton balls
- and lift them off. Use plenty of cotton balls, don't continue to use
- the same one over and over, it could pick up a really nasty chunk and
- scratch your surface.
-
- 4> Wash the mirror in room temperature tap water. Gently.
- First, clean and rinse the sink.
- Line the sink with a folded towel.
- Gently flow room temperature water over the surface.
-
- 5> Rinse the mirror with distilled water. Let it dry standing on edge.
- Again, blot the surface with wet cotton balls to lift dirt.
-
- 6> Fill up a clean sink with water and detergent and soak the mirror for a few
- minutes. The water and mirror should both be room temp. Line the sink
- bottom with a lint free towel. We don't want to break a mirror dropped
- onto a hard sink bottom, or fracture it with hot or cold water.
-
- 7> Swirl the mirror under the water to wash the surface.
-
- 8> GENTLY wipe the surface with cotton balls as the mirror is submerged.
- Swab using a straight motion from one edge to the other.
- Use only the weight of the cotton, and pitch the cotton balls after each pass.
- Make as few passes as possible. Do not repeatedly go over the mirror.
-
- 9> Drain the sink, and rinse with lots of tap water.
-
- 10> Rinse again with plenty of distilled water, and set it on edge to dry.
- Carefully.
-
- Bottom line, be careful, and there's going to be no problem.
- Personally, it scares the hell out of me just to handle my mirrors, let alone
- clean them. I figure every time I hold my mirror I am increasing the chance
- that it will get dropped.
-
- I dropped a 6 inch mirror onto concrete just after I had finished the fine
- grinding stage. It was wrapped in a towel and did NOT break or chip. I was
- lucky.
-
-
- Craig Engelhorn
- AT&T Bell Laboratories
- cae@iexist.att.com
-