Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
we have an old tracking device from a surplus radio telescope that we mounted on my neighbors house. It has a computer program that tracks the sun here in NY and shoots it at the reflector unit from an old solar cooking oven I bought off ebay. We concentrate the beam using a 340 pound hand blown lens from an old lighthouse, the focal distance is about 20 miles so I have to bring my screens over to the next county. For vaccuum unit I have my neighbor come with me when I take the screens on the road trip, he is an extreme left wing loon that seems to create the perfect vaccuum where ever he goes. It works pretty good except we only have 37 days of sunlight here in beautiful New York so sometimes the exposure time is weeks depending on weather pattern.When I upgrade I am going to use Sam, he is always telling folks how to suck it up, he is totally focused and he is really really bright, and i hear he is also pretty fast or at least half-fast. A I & O
Beautifully stated Gilligan. I've seen some folks have their light on a track, if they expose one frame, they can get closer for a faster exposure, if they want to expose more than one frame, they have to be further back, so they move it to a pre-determined spot and shoot away. You can double your distance and shoot 4 screens at once, depending on the size of your vacuum frame of course...
QuoteBeautifully stated Gilligan. I've seen some folks have their light on a track, if they expose one frame, they can get closer for a faster exposure, if they want to expose more than one frame, they have to be further back, so they move it to a pre-determined spot and shoot away. You can double your distance and shoot 4 screens at once, depending on the size of your vacuum frame of course...Yeah! Thank you Professors Gilligan and Sbrem. Only caveat is the reflector is presumably designed for best resolution (light angle is most actnic across the image area) at the stated distance but I had fine resolution shooting "too close" in my homebrewed vac frame for years so it should be a non-issue.
Quote from: mooseman on August 31, 2012, 09:40:40 AMwe have an old tracking device from a surplus radio telescope that we mounted on my neighbors house. It has a computer program that tracks the sun here in NY and shoots it at the reflector unit from an old solar cooking oven I bought off ebay. We concentrate the beam using a 340 pound hand blown lens from an old lighthouse, the focal distance is about 20 miles so I have to bring my screens over to the next county. For vaccuum unit I have my neighbor come with me when I take the screens on the road trip, he is an extreme left wing loon that seems to create the perfect vaccuum where ever he goes. It works pretty good except we only have 37 days of sunlight here in beautiful New York so sometimes the exposure time is weeks depending on weather pattern.When I upgrade I am going to use Sam, he is always telling folks how to suck it up, he is totally focused and he is really really bright, and i hear he is also pretty fast or at least half-fast. A I & ODamn you could contract out to all print shops in a twenty mile radius, they call up give exact time screen will be in their predetermined position you rotate your light house lens and flash expose there screen for them, you could make a killing! Franchise it!