Two 6.5 meter Baade and Clay optical reflecting telescope mounts were manufactured during the 1990’s by L&F Industries, Huntington Park CA., for The Carnegie Institute of Washington DC. This space is a pictorial history of the instruments this blogger documented during final assembly "Where Precision Was A Way Of Life"
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When I first began working for L&F Industries in 1993, one of the leading OEM machine builders and integraters of its time in the US, ...
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The 26,300 pound pintle is the component that centers the whole 300,000 pound rotating OSS mount. It is precision ground to critical toleran...
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Magellan II - 90,000 man hours, 400,000 pounds later! Wife Kelly and daughter Amanda ...
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There are 4 bearings on each altitude disc. 2 on the radius surface and 2 on the flat surfaces. The shoe surface is made out of solid bronze...
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This is one of two giant East/West azimuth disc tripods weighing 45,000 pounds each that attach to the North/South Azimuth disc assemblies. ...
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The big 6.5 meter eye needs a big support system. Though we didn't get to see or install the primary mirror, we designed, fabricated and...
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The Nasmyth platform is used to allow technicians and scientists to gain access to install and change out various instruments including came...
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The secondary ring is an electro-mechanical system that supports and manipulates the Cassegrain mirror high above the primary mirror. It is ...
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