• Focus tension on old Zeiss microscope.

    From peter@easthope.ca@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jun 13 20:38:37 2023
    Hello,

    The focus adjustment knob from a Zeiss surgical microscope is in the
    photos here. I'd guess the scope was built in the 1950s or '60s. http://easthope.ca/ZeissKnob1.jpg
    http://easthope.ca/ZeissKnob2.jpg

    The shorter setscrew here was in the knob when I began work on it. The
    longer screw is one I made.
    http://easthope.ca/ZeissSetscrew.jpg

    The knob threads onto the focus adjustment spindle. The female thread
    in the knob is visible in the photos.

    Tightening the knob on the spindle increases tension on a clutch to
    prevent the head of the scope from sliding out of focus.

    Tightening the setscrew in the knob should lock it on the spindle to hold
    the tension setting but the setscrew has no effect.

    Obviously the setscrew would spoil the spindle thread by landing
    directly on it. The setscrew must push on an intermediate part with a
    thread matching the spindle. I don't understand why it doesn't work.
    The longer setscrew is still too short?

    Not an electronic problem but similar knobs were used on some vintage
    high end electronic equipment.

    Ideas?

    Thanks, ... Peter E.

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  • From Arie de Muijnck@21:1/5 to peter@easthope.ca on Wed Jun 14 15:56:10 2023
    On 2023-06-14 05:38, peter@easthope.ca wrote:
    Hello,

    The focus adjustment knob from a Zeiss surgical microscope is in the
    photos here. I'd guess the scope was built in the 1950s or '60s. http://easthope.ca/ZeissKnob1.jpg
    http://easthope.ca/ZeissKnob2.jpg

    The shorter setscrew here was in the knob when I began work on it. The
    longer screw is one I made.
    http://easthope.ca/ZeissSetscrew.jpg

    The knob threads onto the focus adjustment spindle. The female thread
    in the knob is visible in the photos.

    Tightening the knob on the spindle increases tension on a clutch to
    prevent the head of the scope from sliding out of focus.

    Tightening the setscrew in the knob should lock it on the spindle to hold
    the tension setting but the setscrew has no effect.

    Obviously the setscrew would spoil the spindle thread by landing
    directly on it. The setscrew must push on an intermediate part with a
    thread matching the spindle. I don't understand why it doesn't work.
    The longer setscrew is still too short?

    Not an electronic problem but similar knobs were used on some vintage
    high end electronic equipment.

    Ideas?

    Thanks, ... Peter E.



    I have fixed items like that by inserting a small plastic plug between
    screw and main thread. The plastic deforms without damaging the main
    spindle thread, and securely clamps the spindle.

    Arie

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  • From peter@easthope.ca@21:1/5 to Arie de Muijnck on Wed Jun 14 19:21:53 2023
    In article <nnd$0893e6ee$093e5716@a5b2805ea737c182>, Arie de Muijnck <noreply@ademu.com> wrote:

    I have fixed items like that by inserting a small plastic plug between
    screw and main thread. The plastic deforms without damaging the main
    spindle thread, and securely clamps the spindle.

    Thanks Arie. If I have to drill out whatever is blocking the setscrew
    from having effect, a plastic plug is a good idea to avoid damaging
    the thread on the spindle.

    ... P.

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