Leland Davis
Elite Cafe Member
Is there a correct setup for microscopes for avoiding neck pain?
You can add some tubing to extend your focal distance to your optivisor.Scott Pilkington has a video on you tube about this
Mitch,I think some folks are experiencing ergonomic issues because their vise setup must be level (turntables, typical eccentric vises, etc). My vise is tilted about 10deg toward me and my Leica S6E has a 38deg viewing angle (instead of the typical 45), so my eyepieces are tilted much more toward my face than most setups. I barely lean my head at all and just work with my eyes cast a little downward.
It has maybe <5deg of ‘raking’ view, as you describe it, and also some slight skew/offset to the side as well. If I clamped a tall square/rectangular block in my vise the front and left sides would be slightly in view. I would not be looking directly straight down on its end.Mitch,
Are you then viewing your piece on an even plane (cutting surface parallel with objective lens? Or do you have anything of a raking view?
It’s a huge beast I had custom made yrs ago. The vertical column is from a floor model drill press. The 3’ horizontal arm is mounted on the former table’s bracket. I can crank the height up or down to work over different vises and can swing a 30”+ barrel under it. The whole setup is mounted to an iron framed bench with a granite top. Probably weighs 300lbs.Mitch, what kind of stand do you use?
Photo?It’s a huge beast I had custom made yrs ago. The vertical column is from a floor model drill press. The 3’ horizontal arm is mounted on the former table’s bracket. I can crank the height up or down to work over different vises and can swing a 30”+ barrel under it. The whole setup is mounted to an iron framed bench with a granite top. Probably weighs 300lbs.
I’m a big fan of making stuff zackly like i want it.
What scope and ringlight?Good luck seeing what’s what in these shots of my mess.