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Posted

Hello, I recently acquired this instrument, and I've not been able to figure out what it is. The label says:

 

"Deflectometre JYC

Jobin Yvon [crest]

Type D2  No. 214

Paris-Arcueil"

 

It is nothing like any other deflectometer I've found in research. See photos. Some knobs offer a very very fine adjustment of the lateral and vertical angles of unit. Others change lenses. The dark one is looking forward into hole where central eyepiece unscrewed from. There also happens to be a loose ball bearing inside instrument, about 8mm.

 

Zero info on this to be found online! Hard to believe! Curious to hear feedback, thx in advance. Hope this is correct forum.

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Posted (edited)

It reminds early version of total station theodolite. From times prior lasers and electronics.

Light from some external source goes to inside, and operator of device could see if object inside is illuminated or not. Eventually make adjustments with handles.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodolite

 

 

 

Edited by Sensei
Posted
On 4/16/2019 at 4:08 AM, Endy0816 said:

Here's their company history page:

http://www.horiba.com/us/en/scientific/about-us/horiba-jobin-yvon/history-timeline/

Didn't see that device listed, but does mention a move to Arcueil in the 30's.

It also mentions a Lecomte du Noüy Tensiometer in 1930 so it's probably an old style Deflectometer.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensiometer_(surface_tension)#Du_Noüy_ring_tensiometer

 

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