Modern Physical Laboratory Practice, by John Strong
Modern Physical Laboratory Practice, by John Strong
"Modern" as in 1938, but still a fascinating book for browsing. First published by Prentice Hall: my copy pub. by Blackie & Sons. Interesting chapters on many topics including Hi- vac. techniques, evaporation and sputtering, how to roll your own G-M tubes (doesn't look too difficult) and many others.
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Re: Modern Physical Laboratory Practice, by John Strong
I need the book for telescope makling. Please can you send me the ebook copy of the book?
Re: Modern Physical Laboratory Practice, by John Strong
The fundamental text book for telescope making [ 130MB ] ;-
http://star.arm.ac.uk/history/tat/tat.pdf
and the guy who wrote it;-
http://star.arm.ac.uk/history/moore/Part05.html
Armagh Observatory is a very old but a world famous observatory in Northern Ireland
Sir Patrick Moore was the director of the Armagh Planetarium (Northern Ireland) between 1965 and 1968
http://star.arm.ac.uk/history/tat/tat.pdf
and the guy who wrote it;-
http://star.arm.ac.uk/history/moore/Part05.html
Armagh Observatory is a very old but a world famous observatory in Northern Ireland
Sir Patrick Moore was the director of the Armagh Planetarium (Northern Ireland) between 1965 and 1968
- Doug Coulter
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- Real name: Doug Coulter
- Location: Floyd, VA, USA
- Contact:
Re: Modern Physical Laboratory Practice, by John Strong
I have his Procedures in Experimental Physics from about the same time period.
It's one of my favorites, and has been republished by Lindsay, and so is still in print and at a nominal price, well worth it. It has some information on making telescope mirrors and other optics, glass blowing, vacuum thermopiles, optics, photography and much more.
I've been having lots of fun duplicating what was "rocket science" in 1938 here at the home shop. The only trouble is that many things now have to be searched out, as in you can't just go to the hardware store and get an A battery for its carbon rod, or window screen still made of metal and so on. Still way worth it.
The ISBN is 0-917914-56-2. Lindsay Publications is easy to find on Google, and has many books in the "lost technology" series.
It almost sounds like the same book described in the original post. I'd recommend it to everyone here as a fun read, and also very useful. I especially like one drawing of the lab assistant grinding a mirror, tongue held out just so, and with the sweat rolling off...
It's one of my favorites, and has been republished by Lindsay, and so is still in print and at a nominal price, well worth it. It has some information on making telescope mirrors and other optics, glass blowing, vacuum thermopiles, optics, photography and much more.
I've been having lots of fun duplicating what was "rocket science" in 1938 here at the home shop. The only trouble is that many things now have to be searched out, as in you can't just go to the hardware store and get an A battery for its carbon rod, or window screen still made of metal and so on. Still way worth it.
The ISBN is 0-917914-56-2. Lindsay Publications is easy to find on Google, and has many books in the "lost technology" series.
It almost sounds like the same book described in the original post. I'd recommend it to everyone here as a fun read, and also very useful. I especially like one drawing of the lab assistant grinding a mirror, tongue held out just so, and with the sweat rolling off...
Why guess when you can know? Measure!