Museums' Helio-centric Projection Orreries: Viewlex, Spitz, Goto, Conic Museum has 2 Conic Coperican Helio-Centric Projection Orreries
PLANETARIUM PROJECTOR SERIAL
Museums' Goto M1 Northern Star Hemisphere 1961 Serial # 4 PLANETARIUMS GONE WILD Short 60 Second Video Clip Demonstration of the movements of the Goto S-2 and Mercury Projectors. Index of issues may be found here: "Great Western Observer Index" Museums Fall ad and Winter 2008 ads for GWO are below: Spring and Summer 2008 ads placed in: "The Great Western Observer" There are also articles on pages 16 and 31 about the Museum. Philpott to check the Apollo moon rock samples for life? Well, it has arrived here at the Museum in late April 2009 along with space flown samples. Museums' NASA Electron Microscope Ever wonder what happened to the RCA electron microscope that was used by Dr. Lonnie Hammargrens' Planetarium in Las Vegas, Nevada. The newest (April 2017) addition to our Planetarium is this large 8 foot tall 1/25 scale model of the Space Shuttle Challenger. The book also includes my friend Gary Likert. It features around 27 pages of photographs from my Museum, and even includes a picture of me in the Museum doorway. He spent 3 days with me taking pictures of all my projectors and yesterday, September 21 2019, I received an autographed copy of his new planetarium book. In 2015 I had a wonderful visit from Remi Bragard who came all the way from France to visit my Planetarium Museum. Old Hayden Planetarium Zeiss Projector Paper Weight and Bronze Medallion. Inside of Zeiss Starball showing light source and condensers. Recently retired Zeiss Model IV at Griffith Planetarium (photo by Owen Phairis 8/2008)
PLANETARIUM PROJECTOR TV
Unusual picture of the Zeiss being projected on to a screen for a backdrop of a Tv show Seen here at the Hayden Planetarium in NYC and also in the following pictures taken from original glass magic lantern slides that are part of the Planetarium Projector Museums' historical archives. The First of the Modern Day 'dumbell' Projectors Old Hayden Planetarium in NYC before rebuild
PLANETARIUM PROJECTOR SERIAL NUMBERS
Note: All DS-1 projectors come with serial numbers The DS-1 Chrome comes with the Northern Chrome disc We do not ship to P.O Boxes If your country is not listed in our international shipping program contact us to get a FedEx quote about shipping to your country.Owens' Planetarium Projector and Science Museum Shooting star feature: Random shooting star On/Off, no control over randomness. LED cooling fan: Low dB fan for cooling the LED during main projector operations and during the power-OFF cool down sequence. LED: 10 watts with dimming and soft on/off feature to optimize LED life. Power-Off: 30 & 60 minutes for projection mode, 2 hour default shut offĭisc rotation: 3 speeds and reverse rotation (appropriate when using any southern hemisphere star discs). Rotation Angle: Unit can be operated and rotated from 0 degrees (vertical) to 90 degree (horizontal).
Ceilings with peeked roofs or "popcorn" ceilings will not work well and are not recommended. Viewing surface: Smooth, white, flat surface, ceiling or wall. Projection Distance: Maximum recommended projection distance is 20′ Included Disc: Northern Hemisphere Chrome star disc with over 4.1 million stars. Dimensions: Height 11 inches, Base Diameter 7 inches