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Re: (meteorobs) Rotating shutter RPM's



In a message dated 96-08-29 18:47:35 EDT, you write:

<< Hi everbody
 There has been a lot of Email back and forth regarding the rotational 
 speed of George's shutter and strobe and I am a little confused as to 
 whether he has sorted it out yet.
 The method to use is to mark one of the blades clearly with a felt tip 
 pen, or something like that.  Then start it going and turn on the strobe 
 starting at zero RPM and gradually speeding up.  You will pass through a 
 number of harmonics at which time you will see the marked blade 
 stationary in one place.  Then as you increase speed you will suddenly 
 see two marked blades at 180 degrees to each other.  The strobe is now 
 firing at exactly twice the rotational speed of the blade, which has only 
 had time to make half a revolution.  If you doubled this frequency of the 
 strobe again you will see four marked blades at 90 degrees to each other. 
  
 The highest speed at which you see a single stationary marked blade is 
 the actual rotational speed of the shutter blades.
 
 The explanation for the harmonics below the actual rotational speed is 
 that the marked blade has had time enough to make two, four, eight, etc., 
 rotations before the strobe fires.
 
 The fifty RPM error George is experiencing is, no doubt, due to lack of 
 precision of the strobe, or operator (heaven forbid ;-) ) Or, 
 experimental error as we always used to excuse it in Lab Class.
 
 I hope this helps to sort it out.
 Ron Rennie
  >>
-----
Ron,

Yes...I have it all sorted out...just trying to bring everyone else up to
speed in case they get into constructing a shutter themselves.
As you explained it, is exactly how I now understand it...thanks all the
same.
George Z.