Do not suppose that a long and badly worn surface will fail to show the detail and colours of the planets, the fullest detail also of the moon or the stars. It is surprising how long a silvered surface will continue to do its full work while its appearance is much deteriorated; picking up faint points of light that are near the very limit of its aperture and power, seem alone to require the perfect and fresh film. I know silver films that have been in use for seven years and have not been ever re-polished.
That the Silvered Glass Reflecting Telescope is giving satisfaction and is capable of performing the best work of a telescope—being durable, convenient, and perfectly efficient—may be gathered from the selection of a very large number of satisfactory and most gratifying letters received by the writer; and it has been most encouraging to find in all cases the observer is most eager to express his entire satisfaction, and especially so where so many have been prejudiced, in the absence of experience, with feelings of doubt as to their complete efficiency, and many, again, having used fine refractors.
It will be seen, too, that many have commenced with a small sized reflector, and gone on increasing their optical power until they have obtained a large and powerful instrument, imposing indeed as compared with what was considered a powerful instrument less than half a century ago, and at a fraction of its cost.
The gratifying success which I have achieved, attested by the universal satisfaction given by the instruments supplied by me, is the result of unwearying labour and untiring patience; every speculum, large or small, being figured with my own hands.
I have every facility for setting up instruments, and for testing, working, and regulating them in every part on celestial objects. The optical parts are, therefore, not merely tested separately and subsequently mechanically adjusted, but each and every instrument is put together and optically and mechanically tested, as a whole, before it is permitted to leave the workshop.
Every speculum is most carefully figured, and confidently guaranteed perfect to the extreme edge.
The employment of “stops” of any kind is quite unnecessary, except on bad nights, when the aperture must of course be suited to the degree of steadiness of the air. For, whether the instrument be a reflector or a refractor, the aperture and power used must of necessity be limited by the atmospheric conditions under which observations are made.
It should, however, be remembered that the reflector having not only a much larger aperture than a refractor of same focal length, and, being open to the influence of the external air, is not only affected by a relatively larger column of air, but is affected in a different way. It frequently happens that reflectors of 6 in. to 18 in. aperture, are of same focal length as 5 or 6 inch refractors.
These considerations will explain the occasional use of stops, and the expediency of having them ready to use when they can be of temporary advantage. There are nights in our climate when a 6 inch aperture may be the largest that can be used with satisfaction or advantage; indeed it used to be accepted as an incontrovertible fact that an aperture of G inches was the largest that could be used on average nights in our country. But there are also not a few nights when large apertures, bring great gain to their fortunate possessors.
It is obvious that, mutatis mutandis, these conditions must affect refractors as well as reflectors, with perhaps this difference, that in the case of a reflector the rays pass down the tube and infringe on the speculum as a column of parallel rays; consequently all the external rays of the column travel near the surface of the tube for its entire length. This being so, it is obvious that until the internal and external air and the metal tube have time to equalize in temperature, it will be advantageous, in all work requiring high powers, such as the examination of difficult double stars, to “stop off” for a time the extreme edge by a small diaphragm.