1.10.23

1st October 2023 Disposal of my 4.3m dome project:

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UPDATE: 14th March 2024 Nobody has shown any interest in the dome as an observatory in progress. Nor or as a farm animal shelter. 

I have resorted to advertising it on Facebook:  
https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/1244817256326592/

Price reduced twice to 50kr or £5. It must go! Taking up space. 

Note that the dome is now dismantled into 3 major segments + 2 shutters. Each segment must weigh about 150kg! It is lying in my rural back garden on Fyn in central Denmark. It will require the help of several strong men, or adequate mechanical aid to load the parts onto a car transporter trailer. This is how it was delivered to me by the farmer's supplies business. No physical help will be offered by myself as a 77 year old with increasingly severe health problems.



 

 Sunday 1st October.

 I have decided to dispose of my 4.3m dome project. 

 Following the death of my wife in early 2022 my interest in astronomy and my build projects has not returned. 

 So now I am spreading the word that the dome project may be taken away free of charge. It has cost me around 50,000 Danish Kroner so far. Over £5000 equivalent, but I no longer care.

 The dome is large and heavy but breaks down into three, large segments plus the shutters. Being simply unbolted. Provided there is enough manpower available! I worked entirely alone and it required ingenuity to manage the weight safely. 

 As I live on SW Fyn, in Denmark, those likely to be interested in this project will need to consider transport. They will have to muster at least three strong men to handle the heavy and awkward segments.

 The dome segments were delivered to me on a car transport trailer. Typically available for local hire from garages, petrol stations, etc.. The pickup which brought the segments was fitted with a small crane. There was only the driver to unload it. Two, or preferably three strong men could manage the loading without a crane.  This would have been preferable to avoid scratching the fibreglass.

 The ladder leaning against the dome, in this image, is 3.3m long. It was really too short and required I climb onto the top of the dome to work on my hands and knees!

 My 3m/10' plywood dome, on its two storey building, is in the background. I had already enlarged the observatory building for the bigger dome's footprint. Though sadly it was never lifted into place. That is a full sized 3.3m builders ladder in the image on the left above. My rural garden is surrounded by ever taller trees. Making the expense of hiring a crane increasingly pointless.


 Warning; Do not be driven by greed or over-ambition! This dome is 4.3m in diameter. Over 14'. It weighs around 500kg in total at a guess. Each long and curved segment weighs around 150kg. The very awkward balance of the various parts is very difficult to manage without very serious muscle!

 The spherical shutters run on sixteen, large, inline, roller skate wheels. The dome rotates on fourteen, high quality, 180mm, industrial rollers with needle roller bearings. Laminated plywood rings are provided. Bolted and bracketed to the skirt of the dome. To allow the whole arrangement to be easily taken apart. Yet provide a smooth and stiff surface for the rotation rollers.

 This was my plan from the very beginning. To make a large, observatory dome build as practical as possible. For anyone wishing to copy the same project. The sheer size of the dome would otherwise make it difficult to manage for many amateurs.

 It would almost certainly require crane hire. Rather than a bunch of willing or voluntary enthusiasts. Getting together, to rapidly complete a working, observatory dome of over 14' or 4.3m diameter. With a completed price tag of under £5k. Instead of £50k for a commercial dome of this size.  

BTW: The fibreglass segments are readily available in white. I chose green for my rather conspicuous, two story, raised, rural observatory. Which can be seen from the road. The basic [donor] dome is a calf rearing shelter for farmers. I saw its potential the moment I saw one in a local field!

The manufacturer of this particular dome is Agritech.SRL. An Italian company with local dealers in many countries. They call it their Spheribox. I ordered their normal dome [in green] plus one extra roof [top] segment. To give me enough material to make the shutters. They were kind enough to comply with my request. 

 The basic dome was supplied by a Danish, agricultural equipment dealer as the local agent for Agritech. Before you rush off to order a donor dome for yourself remember that the build requires considerable inventiveness [and considerable expense] to modify into a true observatory. 

 It took me months to progress to the point which I finally reached. Though working alone slowed my progress. Due to the weight of the various components.  

 Just reaching the top of the dome from the outside required ladders at low angles. Needing extra security to stop them sliding away! I used a compost sack or large paving slabs at the base. With foam pipe insulation to prevent the ladder from scratching of the dome's surface. Wrapping the ladder with foam would have been better. Either option provides increased safety due to friction. Access to the top of the dome from the open slit is rather limited due to the sheer scale of the thing.

 

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22.2.23

22.02.2023 Still no progress.

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 Wednesday 22nd February 2023. 

 A picture of my observatory dome. Looking rather sad as it still faces SW into the last storm.

 It has to be taken down by crane. Before I can add the 4.2m/14' dome on top of the enlarged building.

 This will require the top of the building is clear. So I can fit the additional rotation rollers onto a thick, new ring of Baltic birch plywood.


  

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9.2.23

8.02.2023 Solar art captured and distilled from reality by Dave Smith.

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 I was blown away by the beauty and detail in this superb, solar image. So I have duplicated it here with a simplified explanation. It deserves wide appreciation. Perhaps inspiring others to try solar imaging and observing. Or taking an interest in Solar Astronomy.

 This outstanding image was posted on the SolarChat forum and SGL [Stargazer's Lounge] by Dave Smith of Essex, UK. 

https://solarchatforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=39518

 https://stargazerslounge.com/topic/406286-same-cme-as-nigella/

 It shows a CME [coronal mass ejection] with the Earth for scale. Though our tiny planet would never survive being this close. Nor provide such a dramatic perspective. In reality it would be a small, distant dot at this scale. If the Sun were [say] 30cm in diameter. Then the Earth would be 2.7mm in diameter and slightly over 32m away.

 A coronal mass ejection can cause damage on Earth. If it is extreme enough and the eruption facing the Earth at the time. Captured on the 7th February 2023in H-alpha [deep red] light. [False colour added.]

 The original image data would be captured as a video. Usually in black and white on a specialist camera. Mounted on the tail end of a specially filtered telescope. Beware of the dangers of pointing any other instrument at the Sun! Instant blindness or even a fire would be very likely. Specialist solar telescopes are always used by solar imagers and observers. Particularly for H-alpha [deep red light] use.

 The resulting, B&W, still image, after digital processing, is usually coloured to the imager's [digital photographer's] own taste. The very deep red of H-alpha light being rather dark for illustration. While black and white doesn't really do justice to such amazing subject matter.

 I have cropped the image slightly in height. Then added the solar imager's name. To share the beauty of the sun and the sheer scale of its often irregular activities. 

 Here is Daves Smith's link to his solar images on his website.

 https://mysolarpics.co.uk/


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15.1.23

15.01.2023 A bit of a storm.


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 Sunday 15th. A storm is forecast to pass over after lunch. Bringing gusts to 60mph. The wind has never proved a problem with the observatory so far. All eight rotation rollers have hold-down disks. 

 The observatory building site and nearby shed
are looking forlorn and abandoned in the wet.

 I usually face the shutters into the prevailing wind. Adding the usual clamps to ensure the shutters can't open. 

 I think I will take down the 6" for safety. The dome is no longer waterproof which may have weakened it. Better safe than sorry. I haven't been able to do any imaging anyway. Due to the very low sun and poor weather. Besides, the old dome needs to be lifted down with a crane. To be replaced by the larger, fibreglass dome. Now is as good a time as any. If not now, then when? 

I took down the 6" H-a refractor and laid it on the observatory floor under a tarpaulin. Easier than carrying it down the steep stairs. I turned the shutters to face SW. Then I added more screws to the outside of several plywood panels. The wind is already fierce and was rattling the old panels. Some had been temporarily removed to allow me to work on the observatory enlargement. This work had come to a complete standstill following my wife's sudden death back in April.  

 Today I just managed to return indoors. Before a cloudburst with hail and noisy gusts passed over. The view instantly disappeared into mist and the sheer intensity of the downpour.  


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