Those might be workable like wood, but they won't all be as rigid as wood.Dandy97 said:PVC, Polycarbonate and Nylon. All much stronger than wood in simular thickness and all workable with woodworking tools.
noseoil said:"Wood is just not strong enough when as thin as I need it."
Will you please list the properties necessary and engineering application which requires this material? Is the camera you are building a secret? Shear, axial load, tension, compression, bending? Spill the beans. tim
Ah, good tip. I do appreciate it Greg. Don, you too. Thanks. Black 1/8 and 1/4" should work out very well. And it is light, too!gregdavis said:Phenolic resin will work for your application, as Donald suggested. Go to www.mcmaster.com and search under plastics for "garolite". [...]-Greg
Murray@uptowngallery said:So what kind of beast lens is that?
Murray
That is a spectacular piece of glass! I want one...but then who wouldnt.jjstafford said:The second proof-of-performance prototype is here: http://elearning.winona.edu/jjs/nl
Mongo said:That is a spectacular piece of glass! I want one...but then who wouldnt.
John_Brewer said:What a monster. Where did you find that piece of glass or did you make it?
My drawings are abysmal, I know. (did you see them on the second page?) Let me try to clarify: the lens and frame is one piece attached to the tripod block. The back moves back and forth on the rail on the and is not stressed.Ole said:With a lens that big and heavy, wouldn't it be easier to make a camera back and mount it to the lens? A strong cradle for the lens, a lighter one for the back. Bag bellows between. Since the "camera" wouldn't be carrying the weight of the lens, it can be much lighter and simpler.
Just a thought...
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