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Leica Tribrach Optical Plummet Adjustment

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(@amdomag)
Posts: 650
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Hi guys!

I am quite confused with the pattern and direction on how adjustment screws of my Leica tribrach are to be operated as the cross hairs movement appears not consistent when I tried it my way. As far as I can remember, the turning of screws shall be in alternate fashion but it seems not working particularly when trying to reverse the movement.

Anybody can help me with a link? By the way, I am using the SECO adjustment ring.

Thank you.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 8:58 am
(@dave-karoly)
Posts: 12001
 

The Leicas I have adjusted have a screw on each side and top and bottom if I remember right. You loosen one and tighten the opposite like on an old four footscrew transit.

If that isn't working for you then maybe one or more screws are broken or stripped. The newer tribrachs come with tiny little screws which are really cheap and weak.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 9:32 am
(@amdomag)
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Are all the screws necessarily tight when calibration is achieved?

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 10:48 am
(@jim-frame)
Posts: 7278
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> Are all the screws necessarily tight when calibration is achieved?

I think "snug" is a better term than "tight" in this context. You're dealing with finger-tip pressures rather than the fist-and-wrist variety. The screws want to be turned enough to take out the lash and resist loosening under normal vibration, but you don't want to flirt with the yield point of the material.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 11:54 am
(@jimmy-cleveland)
Posts: 2812
 

You have to make sure that when you tighten one screw, you loosen the opposite one. It took me a little tinkering before I caught on to the pattern. Having said that, I don't have any Lieca tribrachs, but I would think that the principles are close to being the same.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 1:02 pm
(@jim-frame)
Posts: 7278
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> You have to make sure that when you tighten one screw, you loosen the opposite one.

I think the reverse procedure is preferable: loosen one, then tighten the opposite. Otherwise, you risk stripping the screw in an effort to move the crosshair.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 1:47 pm
Norman_Oklahoma
(@norman-oklahoma)
Posts: 7616
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FWIW, Leica switched manufacturers and design on their tribrachs in about 2005 +/-? . Before that their tribrachs were made in Austria. Newer ones are made in Czechoslovakia/Czech Republic. The Austrian ones were of much better quality. The two have distinctly different adjustment appuratus.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 1:58 pm
(@dave-karoly)
Posts: 12001
 

We have a post-2005 TCRP1203+ with a tribrach (no O.P.) labeled "Made in Hungary."

The S6 has an even cheaper looking tribrach on it, though.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 2:06 pm
(@jimmy-cleveland)
Posts: 2812
 

Jim,

You are CORRECT! Thanks for that. I would hate for someone to mess up a good tribrach.

Jimmy

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 2:11 pm
Norman_Oklahoma
(@norman-oklahoma)
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I may have confused my eastern European countries.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 2:48 pm
(@rj-schneider)
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Amdomag,
Are you trying to tell us the image is inverted ?

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 3:13 pm
(@rj-schneider)
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I think you should get points for at least spelling Checko.. Czheko..
That country adjacent Yugoslavia, correctly.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 3:16 pm
(@supply-guy)
Posts: 81
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White paper from Leica about their tribrachs.

http://www.leica-geosystems.com/downloads123/zz/accessory/accessories/white-tech-paper/White%20Paper%20Tribrachs_en.pdf

But no adjusting instructions.

 
Posted : August 25, 2012 6:09 pm
(@paul-in-pa)
Posts: 6044
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Back Off Upper/Lower A Hair, Before Adjusting Left/Right

To allow reticle to slide.

Then loosen one side before tightening other side.

Same but different to adjust upper/lower.

Once it is adjusted, snug up all around.

Paul in PA

 
Posted : August 26, 2012 4:40 pm
(@amdomag)
Posts: 650
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Topic starter
 

Thank you guys!

I just finally figured it out, of course with your help.

🙂 🙂

 
Posted : August 28, 2012 12:08 pm
(@mike-lacey)
Posts: 107
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Where are the screws on your tribrach located? I have a Wild GDF22, and there only seems to be two screws on the right side of the eye piece. Nothing on the top, bottom or left. I was wondering what the procedure is for the GDF22.

 
Posted : August 28, 2012 2:13 pm
(@lukenz)
Posts: 513
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Old thread dreadge I know but I have the same question about the gdf22, bubble all good but need to adjust where the eye piece points and can't see the four screws around the eye piece that stand out on the sokkia ones I've sorted?

?ÿ

A image would be fantastic!

?ÿ

?ÿ

 
Posted : December 14, 2020 1:16 pm
 jph
(@jph)
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@lukenz

Sometimes there are screws underneath a threaded cover that you have to unscrew.?ÿ Sometimes they're flat head screws, sometimes hex.?ÿ Sometimes there are 2 screws, both on the right side.?ÿ Sometimes 4 screws on opposite sides.

Attach a picture of yours

 
Posted : December 15, 2020 10:14 am
(@lukenz)
Posts: 513
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@jph

IMG20201216081431

Put a call though to dealers service centre and they were super helpful. On the right side of the plummet when looking at it are two screws that adjust the pointing of the plummet.

?ÿ

Also the reticle was loose in the plummet which required screwing footscrews right up, removing plummet with the three screws in the top where instrument/targets sit and tightening a very fine screw under the focus adjust.

 
Posted : December 15, 2020 12:23 pm
 jph
(@jph)
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Yup, you found the screws.?ÿ Good deal

 
Posted : December 15, 2020 2:11 pm