Some inspiration-Planetarium projectors!

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Andrew Gorman
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Some inspiration-Planetarium projectors!

Post by Andrew Gorman »

Or deep space probes, system defense batteries, cosmic listening posts, what have you. I was always amazed at these things in the ancient long ago and am glad to see some preserved!
http://www.planetariummuseum.org/
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Bellerophon
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Post by Bellerophon »

The last few times I went to a planetarium (Hayden, Fels, and NJ State Museum), those traditional projectors had been replaced by a system that has a serious flaw. Brighter stars are merely larger. Ugh.

The Fels planetarium especially had a neat projector originally. It used slides of the night sky (with no planets in them, of course), so the projected image was a mosaic of the actual night sky.
But isn't it all Klingon opera?

http://bellerophon-modeler.blogspot.com/
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Umi_Ryuzuki
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Post by Umi_Ryuzuki »

Yeah, but they can be a pain when you have to battle one.
So many lenses from which they can fire.

Vividred
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8228/8375 ... 1804_b.jpg
http://www.japanator.com/ul/27694-/04-620x.jpg

:?
'
"I have to go now,... because my life is stupid and leprachans are dorks."
Nyow!
/
=^o^=
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SpaceRanger1
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Location: Carrollton, Texas

Planetaria memories

Post by SpaceRanger1 »

When I was in college, I helped install a Spitz A-1 (the dodecahedron-shaped model) at the new Wichita Falls Museum and Arts Center, Wichita Falls, TX. It turned out to be a used item, purchased from the Fort Worth Children's Museum, where 10 years previously I had taken a summer astronomy course that used that same projector!

The Museum later upgraded to a newer Spitz projector but kept parts of the old one on display. However, it has subsequently been purchased by Midwestern State University and the planetarium closed. Bummer.
Michael McMurtrey
IPMS-USA #1746
IPMS-Canada #1426
Carrollton, TX

"Yup, exactly what SpaceRanger1 is saying. 100%" — seashark
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