🔬 Accessories and some advice for newbie microscopists

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  • čas přidán 17. 07. 2024
  • Here I show you the most essential microscopy accessories.
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    🔬 MICROSCOPE RECOMMENDATION
    I receive many questions on which microscope one should buy. I recommend the following models for amateur microscopy (Affiliate Links to Amazon):
    Children’s/Introductory - Swift or National Optical SS110: amzn.to/2WdS4PX
    For Amateurs - Swift SW380T (with phototube) or Swift SW380B: amzn.to/3fu7aIY
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 52

  • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
    @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 3 lety +1

    👜 MICROSCOPY SHOP - www.microbehunter.com/shop/
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  • @gameliashiagbor5965
    @gameliashiagbor5965 Před rokem +3

    You draw so well

  • @paulfarrell5935
    @paulfarrell5935 Před 5 lety +13

    Oliver! Perfect, perfect, perfect! This was all the information I was looking for plus some! The note book is an excellent idea. For almost 20 years I was an avid scuba diver completing over 1000 dives mostly in the north shores waters of Massachusetts. I kept a log with dive detail such as location, date, ocean condition, depth and length of dive, along with picture of the marine life I saw. Over the years that log book became priceless as a reference tool. I don’t know why I didn’t think of it myself. Thank you so very much sir!

  • @tbjas
    @tbjas Před 5 lety +7

    I have no idea if you will read this, but i wanted to thank you.
    i've always been interested in microscopes but never had the chance to buy one. But i finally bought one after seeing lots of your video's on both of your channels. My microscope has everything i want. A mechanical stage, condensor, 4 obectives (4, 10, 40 and a 60x), a coarse and fine focus knob. It arrived today and i've been spending at least 7 hours so far discovering new things. From mold on a forgotten cucumber to my own blood. Yeast cells to the wing of a housefly.
    Thanks for the videos and clear information. I wish you all the best and happy microbe hunting.

    • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
      @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 5 lety +5

      Hello, I read all comments! I may not respond to all maybe, but I do read them. That's actually one of my goals, to get more people interested in this great hobby. Thank you for your comment!

    • @tbjas
      @tbjas Před 5 lety +1

      @@MicrobehunterMicroscopy Thanks for the reply. Keep up the videos!

  • @jimzielinski946
    @jimzielinski946 Před 5 lety +7

    A video about specimen preparation for permanent mounted slides is a great idea.

  • @chrisdado
    @chrisdado Před 5 lety +6

    For the shallow glass dish shown in here (and other Microbehunter videos) search for 'Tea Light Candle Holder'. Most household stores carry them, varying shapes and depth, shop around for shallow ones. HTH.

    • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
      @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 5 lety +1

      thank you!!

    • @JaySDunham
      @JaySDunham Před 5 lety +1

      I really wanted one exactly like he uses--finally found at Carolina Biological Supply--about $5 each. Search for square watch glass.

  • @barryt09
    @barryt09 Před 5 lety +7

    As always, very informative. Thank you.

  • @lorenzo5749
    @lorenzo5749 Před 4 lety +2

    The drawings you made are beautiful!

  • @thepistilpacker61
    @thepistilpacker61 Před 4 lety +2

    The picture book is really neat. Good job.

  • @PaulingtonGoose
    @PaulingtonGoose Před 3 lety +1

    I use old eyedropper bottles for dispensing water onto slides, it gives a lovely amount of control and are very spill-proof, easy for beginners and involve no glass pipettes which students are adept at breaking.

  • @simone222
    @simone222 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you. ❤️

  • @jurajmikulas4508
    @jurajmikulas4508 Před 3 lety

    Great video,thank's

  • @raymondandrezonlopulalan1137

    Your drawings are impressing

  • @usernamemykel
    @usernamemykel Před 3 lety +2

    Please do a video on which stains for which purpose. THANK YOU!

  • @CavalloDiSpade
    @CavalloDiSpade Před 3 lety +3

    Oh man, the film canister. I used to use those as little containers to hold various stuff. I haven't done that for years though.

  • @MonoStudios-cd6jo
    @MonoStudios-cd6jo Před 3 lety +1

    this CZcams Channel is the Best😁👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @2omskwithlove
    @2omskwithlove Před 4 lety +2

    Wonderful. Question @Microbehunter, what is your process for reusing /recycling slides? I mean how do you wash and how do you dry them? Cover slides?

  • @tanmaygupta2373
    @tanmaygupta2373 Před 4 lety

    Like your channel

  • @edward_grabczewski
    @edward_grabczewski Před 4 lety +3

    Euparal is almost impossible to buy now. What alternatives are there?

  • @Fibr3Optix
    @Fibr3Optix Před 5 lety +1

    If you wanted to make a permanent slide of a flower stem cross section using a microtome. How do you preserve it? I mean Euperal is the mount medium but how do you make it not shrink? Do you soak it in alcohol?

  • @JosephKeenanisme
    @JosephKeenanisme Před 2 lety

    Without having started the video yet I'm curios on how many things I got right (and have on my "when I have money" list) and how many things I missed .

  • @Leitros-kj4qb
    @Leitros-kj4qb Před rokem

    There are drawing accessories ( camera lucida) for older microscopes. I keep looking out for a Zeiss one. However, they are rare and expensive. So far I have not been successful. Do you know whether any of the modern cheaper microscopes have such an accessory? I haven't seen any. I suppose because of the ubiquity of relatively cheap photographic methods they are considered unnecessary. I think that's shortsighted. The best way of understanding some animal or part is to draw it in my opinion. What's your view on the matter

  • @obsoletepowercorrupts
    @obsoletepowercorrupts Před 5 lety +1

    IMO: I reckon this video could have a Part2 which would pertain to _"cheaper ways to upgrade equipment"._ Examples of this might be how some people use a old plastic camera film container (similar to the 5:57 thing you held up) to adapt a cheap webcam onto a microscope so as to make it digital (and thereby add zooming ability digitally).
    Example: czcams.com/video/M6TvCOPN5pI/video.html
    It would be a cool usage of a DesktopPC or RaspberryPi4 since it has dual4k hdmi screens. For video, brownian motion in pollen might be captured. And then for 3D, the PicoLay software you spoke of might be a cool way to import into blender (an easy to use 3D software). Basically, the way in which people upgrade their 3D printers (which are normally £150 to £200) or upgrade laser cutters is the sort of approach. The frugalfilmaker channel does some similar things for photography using a tap-and-die set (or maybe soldering and threaded-rod stuff), and WoodGears does similar for DIY tools. Maybe modding a webcam to remove the IR film filter could be a cheap way to make a basic heat camera on a mscope. Maybe using a multimeter or similar for pH testing. Usage of a carbon C-battery internal rod has been used in the past as a known quantity component instead of the tungsten in a pH meter build. Using a GCSE maths book (or even pre A-Level prep books for polynomials) with maths libraries in various coding languages (even just basic python scripting, let alone fancy usage of R with java) can allow for data analysis in software like pspp (a free sort-of-version of spss). Obviously Chemistry, Physics and Biology can be handy. Maybe using a thermocouple (in a multimeter or oscope) could help build a waterbath for raising temperature (in a starch test or amylase reaction or whatever). Maybe how to aquire enzymes (protease and amlase) and yeasts for the basic gcse style practicals could be useful. Comparisons of cheap epoxy and methacrylate adhesives for keep samples (e.g. of a dry leaf or onion cell).
    How how about this? Hacking that homemade centrifuge of yours by means of an optical encoder wheel (salvaged from a PC mouse of joystick to be driven in glovepie and joy2key) could allow for a speed measure or control for it, such as with a solenoide, wii-remote, or steppermotor. Nothing over-the-top complicated. Just bruteforce software CPU power and simple coding so as to keep things easy.

  • @sadatordeney3116
    @sadatordeney3116 Před 3 lety

    Those dishes are easily available and are called cavity block

  • @rcjp
    @rcjp Před 5 lety +5

    When cleaning your slides do you recover the cover slip too, or throw those away?

    • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
      @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 5 lety +3

      As several cover glasses break during the cleaning process, I usually throw them away. Sometimes there is dried specimen sticking on it, which makes cleaning also more difficult (more force needed and then they break). Sometimes I recycle them, mostly not.

    • @caidenmartin1839
      @caidenmartin1839 Před 5 lety

      Microbehunter Microscopy I even have I jar for the broken coverglasses

    • @ukGunther
      @ukGunther Před 4 lety

      I clean cover glass and never breaks

  • @edward_grabczewski
    @edward_grabczewski Před 4 lety +1

    I was such a novice that when I bought my first AmScope M150C from Amazon, I almost returned it because it had a strange pointer in the eyepiece. I cancelled the return after I did a bit more research!

    • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
      @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 4 lety

      This pointer can be removed easily from the eyepiece. It is usually a wire that is held in place.

    • @edward_grabczewski
      @edward_grabczewski Před 4 lety

      @@MicrobehunterMicroscopy Would you recommend doing so?

  • @brandrewmiller
    @brandrewmiller Před 3 lety

    "Microscope slides - that's kind of clear" 😃😂🤓

  • @oliviergrimard3845
    @oliviergrimard3845 Před 2 lety

    So do you reuse old slides after washing them, or do you put them in the recycle bin

  • @miguelelento5637
    @miguelelento5637 Před 5 lety +4

    How about cleaning the microscope?

    • @ButterBallTheOpossum
      @ButterBallTheOpossum Před 3 lety +1

      Use compressed air. Don't try do disassemble anything especially the lenses unless absolutely necessary.

  • @bendirval3612
    @bendirval3612 Před 5 lety

    You like Euparal better than Hoyer's? The latter seems to be easier to find and less expensive. What's the reason?

    • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
      @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 5 lety

      Hoyer's contains Chloral Hydrate and this substance is not allowed everywhere. Hoyer's is therefore not easily available in all countries. I would say that no single mounting medium is always better than another one. I depends much on the refractive index that is needed and also on the compatibility with the specimen. I simply am using Euparal becasue I know it and am comfortable with it. I would not consider it automatically better for all purposes, but it has for amateur use some advantages over resin-based media (they have xylene).

    • @bendirval3612
      @bendirval3612 Před 5 lety

      @@MicrobehunterMicroscopy Thanks for your answer. I'll have to do a little research on this. Still hoping for a video on staining, especially staining microbes that are still alive (can it be done?).

    • @MicrobehunterMicroscopy
      @MicrobehunterMicroscopy  Před 5 lety +2

      Live staining is really difficult as the chemicals might actually kill the organisms. This is one reason why Phase Contrast microscopy was invented - so that you can see live organisms better. But by feeding eg. paramecia green algae, they will take on the color of the food.

  • @arvetis
    @arvetis Před 4 lety +1

    Why are all of these books out of print and expensive?

    • @evilren1981
      @evilren1981 Před 3 lety +1

      Welcome to scientific publishing. The more useful and specific the book is usually the more it costs. You have to understand the audience may be extremely limited in some cases. It's not unusual to see books priced at 200-300 USD and more. That said there are probably alternatives to the publications recommended here.

    • @ianbcnp
      @ianbcnp Před 3 lety +2

      I just bought Das leben im wassertropfen new for £30 - fabulous book and well worth the price.

  • @ChainsawDNA
    @ChainsawDNA Před 3 lety

    "Insect People" :)

  • @treymurphy6398
    @treymurphy6398 Před měsícem

    i have better soil and halthier plants

  • @n1lknarf
    @n1lknarf Před 2 lety

    Things you need as a novice? A notebook. The rest, slides and etc we don't need to spend too much time on those obvious things. 🤦