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bobbycarty

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  1. Hi Tony, I have looked up the firm of Ross and have discovered that a T Wayland has done a study of the company called Ross of London Chronology. http://home.europa.com/~telscope/Ross/Ross.of.London.chronology.by.T.Wayland.pdf A most interesting piece of history was disclosed in the document. A sideline note beside the date of 10 December 1920 tells that Sir Charles Parsons was the Son of the Earl of Rosse. Sir Charles was elected Director and Chairman of the Board of Ross Ltd on February 1st 1921. Unfortunately I misspelled the Earl's name, it Should be Rosse, not Ross. There is an Earl by name of Ross in Scotland. YouTube has an interesting piece called Lord Rosse's Great Telescope 1967, which was an interview which the Sixth Earl of Rosse gave to Patrick Moore, Astronomer detailing the work of the Third Earl of Rosse born in 1800 in York and died in Monkstown, Dublin in 1867 after having built the world's largest telescope, the Leviathan, a 72" metal speculum (2 parts copper and one part tin) metal mirror reflector which has been restored and is still in place in Birr Castle, Co Offaly in Ireland . Back to the camera/projector, of whatever it should be called, I have not found any images of a Ross 9 1/2" Apo Process f9 Xpres lens on the internet, but I shall keep trying.
  2. Thanks Tony, Perhaps you are right about it being a projector. I have attached a snap of the rear of the contraption which shows the large lens swivelled out to show the three opening concentric doors at the back, Sizes are, 10 1/4 " x 8", 6 3/4" x 5" , 4 1/2" x 3 1/2" (255mm x 205mm, 170mm x 125mm , 115mm x 90 mm) approx sizes. All this leads me to believe that it might have been a convertion job, old camera to projector. In relation to the Ross lens company, it was, I believe, at one time run by the Earl of Ross, whose family name was Parsons who owned Birr Castle in Ireland and they built the world's largest telescope there in the nineteenth century. I wonder is there be any connection to you?
  3. I have just received an antique plate studio camera which has a Ross 9 and a half inch Apo process Xpres f9 lens, number 159315. The camera is mounted on a large base and has to the rear, three differently sized opening doors, presumably for separately sized glass plates. To the rear also is a large heavy lens approximately 8" in diameter mounted on a metal swivel. I do not know if this lens was intended for checking the sharpness of the image or if it enabled the camera to double as a projector of slide images or whatever. Perhaps someone might have an idea. The camera is mounted on a large base which has small wheels underneath and a counter weight to stabilise the unit when it is in use.
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