Hi John,
Thanks for the information on the GMT. As we live not far from it we will take 
a trip to see it. Will take some photos.
Thanks,
Roderick Wall. 


Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: john.pick...@bigpond.com Date: 14/9/18  
9:52 am  (GMT+10:00) To: Sundial List <sundial@uni-koeln.de> Subject: The Great 
Melbourne Telescope (slightly peripheral to the List) 
Good morning,

I received this news piece from another group I’m on, and thought it might 
interest List members.

*******
The Great Melbourne Telescope

The Great Melbourne Telescope (GMT) is being restored after sitting 
ingloriously out in the weather in Canberra for several years.

The Great Melbourne Telescope was built in Dublin in 1868 and erected at 
Melbourne Observatory in 1869. At the time it was the second largest 
telescope in the world and the largest in the southern hemisphere.

When Melbourne Observatory closed in 1944, the telescope was sold to the 
Commonwealth Observatory at Mount Stromlo, Canberra. At Mount Stromlo the 
telescope was given a new 50-inch glass mirror and became an integral part 
of Mt Stromlo’s work from 1961 into the 1970s. In the 1990s the telescope 
was rebuilt with two large-scale digital cameras for the search for evidence 
of dark matter. Then in January 2003 a bushfire swept across Mt Stromlo, its 
firestorm destroying the majority of the telescopes and buildings. Only the 
large iron castings from the GMT, bent metal and broken glass remained.

Unloved and broken it sat in the extreme cold of Canberra’s weather for at 
least four years until members of the Astronomical Society of Victoria (ASV) 
embarked on a mission to rescue it in 2008. Lacking plans or drawings and 
missing at least 180 parts, a team of ASV volunteers has been painstakingly 
dismantling it in a large restoration area in Melbourne.  Every available 
working part has been identified, numbered, restored or rebuilt.

The GMT was built with a speculum mirror lens and is the last of the great 
mirrored telescopes. An unforgettable moment for the restoration team came 
in 2010 when a staff member found a box in the museum’s store and called for 
expert help to confirm the contents. The box contained the original 
flotation system for the telescope’s one-ton white bronze mirror. It was a 
joyous day for the GMT reconstruction team who had long wondered what had 
happened to this item of 19th century engineering which provides a balanced 
bed of 48 steel balls to support the back surface of the mirror evenly, 
keeping distortion of the mirror surface to less than a 1/10,000th 
millimetre.

The dollar value of the ASV work is incalculable, unlike the restoration 
costs. Funding for the project is an ongoing challenge. The replacement 
mirror alone, is likely to be in excess of $200,000. Many parts of the GMT 
can be repaired or remade in the restoration area by the combined efforts of 
Museum Victoria staff and the ASV volunteers. When larger equipment is 
required, it is manufactured by the staff at Scienceworks.

A 2-metre high photograph of the telescope from 1885 is a key reference for 
the group as they establish which parts are original and which were replaced 
at Mt Stromlo Observatory. The ASV team hope to have the GMT back home at 
Observatory House in 2019 to coincide with the 150th anniversary of its 
arrival in Melbourne. Everyone interested in following the progress of the 
GMT restoration or wanting to donate to this great cause can do so through 
www.greatmelbournetelescope.org.au

Written from information at www.greatmelbournetelescope.org.au and an 
article written by Liz Clarkson (also on the GMT website).

*********


Cheers, John

John Pickard
john.pick...@bigpond.com

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