NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Sextant Repairs
From: Douglas Denny
Date: 2009 Aug 25, 10:47 -0700
From: Douglas Denny
Date: 2009 Aug 25, 10:47 -0700
I re-silvered the mirror on my favourite Mk. IX-BM when I found it had deteriorated to the point of being unuseable. In fact it was this exercise which revived my interest in navigation again. I had been promising myself to do the job for a long time. The process is straightforward and has been known and used for instruments, telescopes, and ordinary flat mirros since Mr Brashear developed it in the 1880s up to about the 1930s. (Mr. Brashear actually modified an existing process). Tollen's reagent for chemical analysis indicating reducing agents is the same process. It was used for the very large telescope mirrors in observatories until large object vacuum coating became possible when the mercury entrapment vacuum pumps needed were invented and good vacuums were then possible in a large container. The Brashear Process is very simple, but there are difficulties, principly the obtaining and use of the chemicals. Also the glass surface has to be really scrupulously clean for good deposition, the glass repeatedly cleaned with alcolhol and water; then acetone, tri-chloroethylene, ether or other powerful degreasant, and preferably in concentrated nitric acid for final cleaning, and care must be used in preparation as highly explosive silver fulminate can be precipitated if not careful with procedure. Most of these chemicals are not available easily in the EU now as they are banned except for specialist use. The main trouble for anyone wanting to do this is the high cost of silver nitrate and other chemicals for what is a very small amount needed for a small mirror like this (less than one gramme of silver nitrate); and the chemicals which are highly corrosive or dangerous when not handled correctly or knowledageably. Trichloroethylene for example, which used to be used everywhere in industry in the 1960s for de-greasing everything and anything and was used as an early cloting 'dry-cleaner', produces phosgene gas when heated to high temperature - for example in your cigarette when you handle the chemical in the cleaning baths and then have a drag on your cigarette. Phosgene was a poison gas used in the first world war! I use acetone which is a good explosive mixture in air (highly dangerous) - besides rotting your brain if you are stupid enough to like sniffing it. The concentrations of solutions needed has to be adjusted for very small scale use too, which needs laboratory equipment, as the amounts used in the reference articles about Brashear process are for large mirrors some feet across. I suggest you only attempt this if you have experience of chemicals or general laboratory work. ------------ Included are pictures of the silvered mirror. First picture is the mirror held in a dish as silvered just after the process - you are looking at the top surface of the silvering on the top surface of the glass: it is a nice golden colour and is still a fair mirror on this 'outside' surface of silver, which is not the used mirror itself i.e from the glass side. This was removed by wiping with conc. nitric acid. The final (used) mirror silvered surface is the lower one as held in the dish - as the mirror is superior because precipitate does not affect the deposition process when held upside down. Brashear noted this especially for large optical telescope mirrors. It takes about three to five minutes thats all. (In case anyone wished to ask: I am very sorry but I cannot take on any mirrors for silvering I simply do not have the time - and besides, small laboratory vacuum coatings are readily available in the spectacle optics trade for a reasonable price I believe, and are probably superior). Douglas Denny. Chichester. England. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ NavList message boards: www.fer3.com/arc Or post by email to: NavList@fer3.com To , email NavList-@fer3.com -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---