Thanks all. I plan to get a camera for the scope, but all of the cameras that Amscope stocks seem to be kinda junky. Still looking for a decent one.
Place a coin on the bench and adjust the zoom so it almost fills the view.
Close your right eye and move the coin so it is central in the view and adjust the dioptre for best focus. Now close your left eye and adjust the dioptre for best focus. Is the coin still central? How is the view with both eyes?
If the coin is in significantly different positions through each eyepiece then you may need a service.
If like me you have very different vision in each eye, then it's worth starting the procedure just using your best eye and looking through each eyepiece with that.
Thanks for the clever coin trick. I just tried it.
Everything seems to be in order. Between both eyes, the coin appears identically across the top and bottom edges. The very left and right of the coin seem offset very slightly, but I think this is just a perceptual artifact due to parallax. (I
was concerned that there may be some sort of alignment issue.)
I readjusted the interpupillary distance and the diopter and it seems to have helped some.
Hi
The only other thing I would add:
Evaluate your work position while using the microscope. Are you leaning way over it? Are you bending down a long way or stretching to reach it?
Yes this seems obvious talking about it. It is really easy to miss the "my chair is wrong" part while you are right in the middle of working on something very complex.
Bob
Thanks for this tip. The scope is on a desk surface that is 76cm from the floor, and the eyepieces are about 42cm on center from the top of the bench (this leaves 15cm working distance under the light ring). I have to sit with almost perfectly vertical posture to use the microscope due to the configuration. I have now noticed that I
am slightly stretching my neck up to look down into the eyepieces. It is possible(likely?) that some of the headache/discomfort is from muscle/neck strain.
After spending some more time with the scope, I suspect that the better part of the headache is from the bright light.
I have blue eyes, and am pretty sensitive to light. I wear sunglasses outside most of the time--when the sun is bright. Along with the microscope, I bought the 144 LED light ring (
http://www.amscope.com/144-led-lighting-direction-adjustable-microscope-ring-light-with-adapter.html ). I have been using it with the brightness maxed out, because I seem to be able to see more clearly with this much light. I have tried turning the brightness down a few "clicks" (the cheap yellow arrows), and this does seem to help out the headache, at least in the short term. I haven't yet tried using the microscope for an extended period with the brightness reduced.
An aside-- I (think I?) understand the general mathematics/geometry related to the optics in the microscope, but the interpupillary distance sure seems touchy. Even the tiniest bit off to the side, and you lose the image entirely.