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OpenFlexure Microscope

55 pointsby o4clast Wednesday at 4:16 AM10 commentsview on HN

Comments

augusteotoday at 2:22 AM

I don't work in hardware, but projects like this are inspiring. Taking something expensive and specialized and making it accessible with open designs.

The WHO recognition for low-resource settings is the kind of impact that matters.

gnabgiblast Wednesday at 4:20 AM

Popular in:

2024 (189 points, 20 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42115243

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abdullahkhalidstoday at 1:02 AM

The core of a microscope are the lenses. For this, you are required to buy three different ones [1]. One of these can be acquired from Thorlabs for 65 USD [2].

How difficult would it be to build lenses of this quality "at home"?

[1] https://build.openflexure.org/openflexure-microscope/v7.0.0-...

[2] https://www.thorlabs.com/item/AC127-050-A

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nickparkeryesterday at 9:31 PM

Fun old project but the technology has improved[0] since then.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgQbPdiuUTw

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dekhntoday at 1:47 AM

If you have a 3d printer, I think one of the most practical things you can do is make UC2 cubes (or just buy them). It's simpler to print, a bit more flexible, and a good introduction to the various technologies.

anfractuosityyesterday at 8:15 PM

Another 3D printed microscope https://github.com/TadPath/PUMA looks very interesting too.