As the length of the plates is only about five inches, it is necessary, excepting for persons very short-sighted, to have a convex lens placed in front of the eye-hole E, as shown in [Figs. 30] and [32]. A brass ring containing a plane glass screws into the outer ring C D, when the instrument is not in use; and there is an object-box containing fragments of differently coloured glass. This object-box consists of two plates of glass, one ground and the other transparent, set in brass rims. The transparent one goes nearest the reflector, and the brass rim which contains it screws into the other, so as to enclose between them the coloured fragments, and regular figures of coloured and twisted glass. A loose ring surrounds this object-box; and when this ring is screwed into the circular rim C D, the object-box can be turned round so as to produce a variety of patterns, without any risk of its being detached from the outer cone.
In applying this instrument to opaque objects, such as engravings, coins, gems, or fragments of coloured glass laid upon a mirror, the aperture of the mirrors is laid directly over them, the large cone M M having been previously unscrewed, for the purpose of allowing the light to fall freely upon the objects. This property of the Kaleidoscope is of great importance, as in every other form of the instrument opaque objects must be held obliquely, and therefore at such a distance from the reflectors as must affect the symmetry of the pattern.
As the perfection of the figures depends on the reflectors being kept completely free of dust, particularly at their junction, where it naturally accumulates, the greatest facility is given by the preceding construction in keeping them clean. For this purpose, the large cone must be unscrewed; the reflectors having been previously closed, by turning the index to 60 on the ring. They are next to be opened to the utmost, and the dust may in general be removed by means of a fine point wrapped in clean and dry wash-leather. If any dust, however, still adheres, the small screw in the side of the ring opposite to the index should be removed, and the smaller cone, N N, also unscrewed. By easing the supporting screws of either of the reflectors, their touching sides will separate, so as to allow a piece of dry wash-leather to be drawn between them. When every particle of dust has been thus removed, the metals should be re-adjusted and closed before the cones are replaced; both of which should be screwed firmly into the ring R R.
As the axis of motion in the preceding construction is necessarily the axis of the cones and rings, the diameter of these cones and rings must everywhere be double the breadth of the reflectors. From this cause, the tube, and consequently the object-box, are wide, and the instrument is, to a certain degree, not very portable. This defect is completely avoided in another Polyangular Kaleidoscope constructed by Mr. Bate, upon entirely different principles, which we shall now proceed to describe.
Bate’s Polyangular Kaleidoscope
with Glass Reflectors.
Fig. 33.
Fig. 34.
Fig. 35.