On Jan 4, 2017, at 1:06 PM, Jon Elson <elson at
pico-systems.com> wrote:
...
Previous messages suggested the LGP-30 drum was plated with nickel. If there are
amateur astronomers with a vacuum evaporator, it might be possible to get them to adjust
their setup slightly to vacuum evaporate nickel on your drum, after refinishing the base.
You'd need a rig to slowly turn the drum while evaporating the nickel. Some other
research labs at universities might have the necessary equipment, also - check with the
Physics department (or electrical engineering).
Nice idea. You'd want to check that the same filament works with nickel. Standard
mirror coating is aluminum, using a tungsten filament. Some other metals don't work
that way because the molten metal doesn't adhere to tungsten (silver is an example).
The procedure, including the filament to use, is described very nicely in "Procedures
in Experimental Physics" by John Strong. It was reprinted by Lindsay Publications,
now out of business but it might still be available. Great book, also for some other
crafts such as glass working (useful for those who want to build their own vacuum tubes).
paul