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dewshields for Binoculars
- ftodonoghue
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17 years 10 months ago #39217
by ftodonoghue
Cheers
Trevor
dewshields for Binoculars was created by ftodonoghue
Hi folks.
I want to make a set of dewshields for my 20X80's. I was thinking of having them extend about 3-4 inches from front of binoculars. My question is.
How wide do I need to make them to ensure I do not interfere with light path. Can I just fit them snugly against the outside of binoculars or do I need to make them extrawide?
Thanks
I want to make a set of dewshields for my 20X80's. I was thinking of having them extend about 3-4 inches from front of binoculars. My question is.
How wide do I need to make them to ensure I do not interfere with light path. Can I just fit them snugly against the outside of binoculars or do I need to make them extrawide?
Thanks
Cheers
Trevor
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- Seanie_Morris
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17 years 10 months ago #39228
by Seanie_Morris
Midlands Astronomy Club.
Radio Presenter (Midlands 103), Space Enthusiast, Astronomy Outreach Co-ordinator.
Former IFAS Chairperson and Secretary.
Replied by Seanie_Morris on topic Re: dewshields for Binoculars
The only way you will really know Trevor is if you make a mock-up set by rolling a sheet of paper around the objective(s) and testing them that way.
Midlands Astronomy Club.
Radio Presenter (Midlands 103), Space Enthusiast, Astronomy Outreach Co-ordinator.
Former IFAS Chairperson and Secretary.
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- mjs
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17 years 10 months ago #39229
by mjs
Michael Scully
Visit Kerry Astronomy Club
Replied by mjs on topic Re: dewshields for Binoculars
Hi Trevor,
The field of view for a pair of 10x50 is about 5.5 degrees. That is 2.75 degrees a side. Therefore for a 100mm long dewsheild the end diameter would need to be only 9.6mm bigger than the lens to be totally clear of the field of view. (Tan(5.5/2)x100)x2
I just knew those maths would find a use some day!!
Michael
The field of view for a pair of 10x50 is about 5.5 degrees. That is 2.75 degrees a side. Therefore for a 100mm long dewsheild the end diameter would need to be only 9.6mm bigger than the lens to be totally clear of the field of view. (Tan(5.5/2)x100)x2
I just knew those maths would find a use some day!!
Michael
Michael Scully
Visit Kerry Astronomy Club
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- ftodonoghue
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17 years 10 months ago #39235
by ftodonoghue
Cheers
Trevor
Replied by ftodonoghue on topic Re: dewshields for Binoculars
Thanks for the answers lads.
Michael
Can you show me the workings for that, Its been years since I did any trigonometry. I also need to work it out for 80mm objectives with a field of view of about 3.5 or slightly more degrees.
Also, as per your previous post, why would it be 2.75 degrees a side. Each side has a FOV of 5.5 on 10X50's and 3.5 in 20X80's
Michael
Can you show me the workings for that, Its been years since I did any trigonometry. I also need to work it out for 80mm objectives with a field of view of about 3.5 or slightly more degrees.
Also, as per your previous post, why would it be 2.75 degrees a side. Each side has a FOV of 5.5 on 10X50's and 3.5 in 20X80's
Cheers
Trevor
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- mjs
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17 years 10 months ago #39241
by mjs
Michael Scully
Visit Kerry Astronomy Club
Replied by mjs on topic Re: dewshields for Binoculars
Hi,
5.5 degrees is the total field of view for most 10x50's. This is 2.75 degrees each side of the centerline (5.5/2)
The Tan of an angle is the opposite over the adjacent, (ie the gap from the edge of the lens), to the inside of the dew shield, divided by the adjacent (the length of the shield).
T=O/A, therefore O=TxA. This is one side, so multiply by 2 to get the amount of the diameters increase.
So Diameter increase is Tan(half the field of view) x length of dewshield x2
I will let you work out the 80mm binoculars...... Empower the people!
Michael
5.5 degrees is the total field of view for most 10x50's. This is 2.75 degrees each side of the centerline (5.5/2)
The Tan of an angle is the opposite over the adjacent, (ie the gap from the edge of the lens), to the inside of the dew shield, divided by the adjacent (the length of the shield).
T=O/A, therefore O=TxA. This is one side, so multiply by 2 to get the amount of the diameters increase.
So Diameter increase is Tan(half the field of view) x length of dewshield x2
I will let you work out the 80mm binoculars...... Empower the people!
Michael
Michael Scully
Visit Kerry Astronomy Club
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- ftodonoghue
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17 years 10 months ago #39242
by ftodonoghue
Cheers
Trevor
Replied by ftodonoghue on topic Re: dewshields for Binoculars
My figures still do not match yours..sent you a pm.
Cheers
Trevor
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