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Re: The Wild T4 Theodolite - Don't Sneeze!
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2016 Apr 03, 10:54 -0700
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2016 Apr 03, 10:54 -0700
On 2016-04-02 22:33, I wrote: > The T2 circle has 10 minute graduations. Correction: the circle is graduated every *20* minutes. The two halves of the split image in the reading microscope move in opposite directions, so the graduations coincide every 10 minutes. The micrometer has a 10 minute range. > In the reading microscope, > opposite sides of the circle are visible simultaneously, one above the > other in a split image. The lower half is inverted and moves right when > the upper half moves left. Correction: the *lower* half is upright. That's where you read the angle. The reason for superimposing images from opposite sides of the circle is eccentricity error. In general, the geometric center of the graduated circle is not exactly on the instrument axis of rotation. Therefore, even if perfectly graduated, the instrument will read high or low depending on the direction it's pointed. (Significant eccentricity error used to be common on sextants, though I think modern manufacturing methods have practically eliminated that.) The solution is to read the circle at two points 180° apart. For instance, with an old fashioned theodolite the observer would set the telescope on the target, then step around to the side of the instrument to read the angle with a microscope. At the same time his assistant took a reading on the opposite side. The mean reading was free of eccentricity error. Heinrich Wild devised an optical system to superimpose both images in the observer's view, plus a micrometer to measure their offset. Moreover (except the T4), the microscope eyepiece is on the telescope. The observer need only shift his head a few millimeters to read the circles. No walking around the instrument, no eccentricity error.