I previously requested ideas for the azimuth bearing over on the "General" forum, which I've incorporated into the design. I used a 390mm diameter ball-raced lazy Susan slew bearing. I got it from Simply Bearings who do a range of them. I assumed it would cost a fortune, but it was about £38. The white outline was a bit of a mistake during routing the base. It's filled and flatted, and has no effect on function.
Then I carefully washed the mirrors which were a bit grubby (following instructions on YouTube). Rinsed with distilled water, they look a lot better:
I'd previously painted the inside of the tube matt black, and also fitted a much better quality focusser to replace the rather sketchy plastic original:
I got a laser collimator, which was good fun to use, especially when I put a snuffed candle in the tube to generate some smoke. The kids loved turning the adjusters and watching the beam move about until it was bang on:
The Telrad reflector sight still worked on its existing battery after at least 15 years in storage. I did treat it to a new one though:
I made the lower base from two 12mm ply sheets glued and screwed together. I would have used 1” ply, but couldn’t source any locally, and didn’t want to travel without good reason, so I made do with what I could carry within walking distance of home. Then put three adjustable feet on it from Amazon, and secured it to the lower mount with an M10 stud, thrust bearing and nylon nut. the latter was tightened just enough to stop separation of the lower mount structure from the circular base.
I also printed a quick eyepiece rack, and that’s it:
Ultimate goal is astrophotography, so the current w.i.p. Is a motorised equatorial wedge table. Should get about an hour of tracking out of it.
I've not used it yet – too cloudy! I really hope it works ok in 'real world' conditions.
Thanks for looking!