Beseler 22" lens assembly Post #1
I recently found a Beseler opaque projector hiding in a closet.
I took it out and found a brass lens tube peeking out from the mounting ring. As I lifted the PJ up I noticed that the lenses were loose inside the tube. They almost fell back into the PJ but I managed to level off before badness happened. I looked inside the PJ and "lo and behold" the retaining ring was sitting inside on the stage. I carefully removed the lens tube and then slid the lenses out. The two double convex lenses had a smokey haze on the surface and the double concave was clear but had a few chips near the edges ( outside the lightpath). It looks like someone had removed the lenses (probably some sadistic sicko frying ants ). After some experimentation and research on the web I found the best image was when the two dcv lenses were on the outsides with the greater curvatures facing out and the dcc in the midddle. I cannot tell if there is any difference in the two dcv lenses or the curvatures of the two concave surfaces on the dcc. Can any one tell me the correct order and orientation of the lenses and the spacers? Also the foggy haze on the lenses does not come off with acetone denatured alcohol, or windex. Any suggestions? Thanks for reading a newbie post and thanks in advance for any help!
I recently found a Beseler opaque projector hiding in a closet.
I took it out and found a brass lens tube peeking out from the mounting ring. As I lifted the PJ up I noticed that the lenses were loose inside the tube. They almost fell back into the PJ but I managed to level off before badness happened. I looked inside the PJ and "lo and behold" the retaining ring was sitting inside on the stage. I carefully removed the lens tube and then slid the lenses out. The two double convex lenses had a smokey haze on the surface and the double concave was clear but had a few chips near the edges ( outside the lightpath). It looks like someone had removed the lenses (probably some sadistic sicko frying ants ). After some experimentation and research on the web I found the best image was when the two dcv lenses were on the outsides with the greater curvatures facing out and the dcc in the midddle. I cannot tell if there is any difference in the two dcv lenses or the curvatures of the two concave surfaces on the dcc. Can any one tell me the correct order and orientation of the lenses and the spacers? Also the foggy haze on the lenses does not come off with acetone denatured alcohol, or windex. Any suggestions? Thanks for reading a newbie post and thanks in advance for any help!
I have one of those 22" fl opaque projector lenses in my projector. Works great with a 15" LCD! I get about a 95" image from a 12' throw distance. My image is very sharp with each pixel's three color stripes visible from corner to corner.
You have the right lens order and orientation for the outer positive lenses. Now the only questions are:
Is the negative lens in the middle facing the right direction?
Which way should you send the image through the lens?
Those should be pretty easy to figure out by trying each of the four possibilities with a real projected image.
As for the "foggy haze" on the lenses: Stop trying to remove it! That is the anti-reflective coating, and projectors work much better with it. It is a mineral salt that you could remove with a strong acid or base, but then your projected image would be messed up by reflections between the lens surfaces.
You have the right lens order and orientation for the outer positive lenses. Now the only questions are:
Is the negative lens in the middle facing the right direction?
Which way should you send the image through the lens?
Those should be pretty easy to figure out by trying each of the four possibilities with a real projected image.
As for the "foggy haze" on the lenses: Stop trying to remove it! That is the anti-reflective coating, and projectors work much better with it. It is a mineral salt that you could remove with a strong acid or base, but then your projected image would be messed up by reflections between the lens surfaces.
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