The Universal Metalloscope-A Perfected Microscope For The Examination Of Metals.

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 11
- File Size:
- 779 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1911
Abstract
(Winces-Barre Meeting, June, 1911.) THE instrument about to be described meets so perfectly the special needs of the metal microscopist that there seems to be little doubt but its merits must be readily appreciated by those who have had any experience in the microscopical examination of metals. The Microscope-Stand.-The microscope-stand proper, Fig. 1, consists of a microscope-tube, provided with both coarse and fine adjustments of the best construction, and with a draw-tube, rigidly mounted on a bar supported at both ends on substantial and firm cast-iron legs. The height between the table and the under side of the supporting bar is 5 in. and the distance between the supporting legs 12 inches. This arrangement' affords free space below the objective for the examination of large specimens of metals, such as full rail-sections, without detracting in the least from the value of the instrument when applied to the examination of the usual small specimen, as explained later. Many metal microscopists frequently have to examine bulky specimens, and this is altogether impossible with the ordinary microscopes as well as with the special metallurgical microscopes which have been designed and described from time to time. Recourse must be had to all sorts of makeshifts for the proper support of large specimens, or, more often, the microscopist gives up the attempt altogether, or else resigns himself to the cutting of the bulky samples into small pieces to -be laboriously polished and separately examined. It is believed that an instrument permitting the examination of large as well as of small specimens with equal ease and accu-
Citation
APA:
(1911) The Universal Metalloscope-A Perfected Microscope For The Examination Of Metals.MLA: The Universal Metalloscope-A Perfected Microscope For The Examination Of Metals.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1911.