michaelbsc
Member
Few amateur telescopes have a large enough focuser aperture to cover MF or LF films. Typical focuser diameters are 1.25 or 2 inches. Others are designed to cover larger format film, and if you have to ask the price...
So, let's talk more about this. (And maybe the CIA, FBI, or some other three letter bureau will chime in.)
If the focuser aperture is too small on a hobby store telescope, then the trick is to just build one. A sandwich honeycomb primary mirror on eBay is a lot cheaper than a lens, and my brother's been into the telescope hobby for 40 years now, so I have a resource to draw on. He doesn't know much about photography, but I've got that end covered.
If I'm making my own, then I can make the camera/film-back attachment point any way/size/shape I want it. (And if I don't want to keep it after I'm done then one of my brother's telescope buddies will probably buy it so my losses are managable. I just need to fabricate something that's astronomy friendly afterwards.)
So, assuming I'm building a lens, rather than a telescope, would my plan be to fab a telescope tube much like an amateur scope, expect where the eyepiece would normally go I would manufacture some kind of GG and Graflock assembly? Perhaps finding a scrap Mini-Speed is a reasonable plan after all. Then there's a shutter already in place.
Since this would be a mirror, not be a refractory type lens, will this have the trouble of vignetting in the field of view. I realize that the problem of mechanical vignetting will exist, but what about light fall off as with a lens?
MB