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Microtome M16


Why
How
TODO

Why

A microtome is needed for cutting samples for microscopy. The samples have to be suitably thin, so the cells and structures in general are in only one layer, unoccluded. Multiple techniques are used here, with handheld microtome being one of the oldest and simplest.

Off the shelf microtomes are however somewhat large and unwieldy. A small one was made on a whim.


How

The microtome has a few basic parts. The top table, where the cutting action happens; this has to be flat. The hole in which the sample is held, whether in wax cast or in e.g. a cut piece of carrot. And the piston, usually screw-actuated, which controllably pushes the sample out.

A M16x40 hex-head bolt was used as a starting point, for the table and the body of the device. The piston was chosen to be made from a piece of 10mm steel rod (part of a shank of a M10 bolt that gave the rest of itself to another project). The screw was chosen to be an unmodified M12 bolt randomly laying around.

A hole was predrilled to the bolt head on a lathe, then continued through all its length on a drill press.


M16 40mm bolt

bolt head predrilled

drilled through

drilled through, head side

The hole was then drilled to 10mm from the head side and 10.2mm from the shank side. A standard M12 thread was cut in the shank side, to about half the length.


M12 bolt, M16 bolt drilled and threaded, 10mm rod

M12 bolt, M16 bolt drilled and threaded, 10mm rod

The head was faced on a lathe to be flat.


Head side, drilled and faced

Bolt, drilled and faced

The piston rod was faced as well.


Rod, faced

Rod, faced

Rod, faced

The rod was placed into the hole in the bolt and its fit was tested if it can move freely.


Bolt with rod in place

Bolt with rod in place

Bolt with rod in place

Bolt with rod in place

The assembly was put together and briefly tested, so far without the sample. The nut plays no structural role, is there only to make the assembly easier to hold in hand.


Full assembly

Full assembly

Full assembly

Full assembly

Full assembly

TODO


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