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| subject: | Re: ATM Astigmatism on 20 inch thin mirror |
From: "Vladimir Galogaza" To: "ATM shore" Reply-To: "Vladimir Galogaza" >. The thing that has to be >considered is that the glass is very thin so you are going to have to make >sure that the glass is properly supported or you will just put a the >astigmatism back in in a different orientation. How to properly support the blank? Would it be proper to make a very thick disk from dental stone (extra hard variety) or cement, say 2 or even 4 inches thick than after cured put on it a fresh layer of dental stone sufficiently thick to accommodate unevenness of the blanks back and put blank on it. Dental stone will presumably take the exact form of the mirrors back ( this is what dental stone is used for by dentists) and when cured will simulate thick mirrors stiffness ( to the point). Now I ask experts to tell us what stiffness ( if any) will have this composite expressed in equivalent thickness of some hypothetical pure glass blank. Of course this composite will serve only for grinding, polishing, figuring. Later thin mirror should be separated and placed in one of those multihundred point cells. Regards Vladimir. --- BBBS/NT v4.00 MP* Origin: Email Gate (1:379/1.100) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 379/1 633/267 |
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