Mike, I didn't run your numbers but from my readings, I think your process is correct. If your erector lens doesn't magnify, add the additional focal length (out from both sides of the erector) to the objective focal length, and then divide that total by the ocular lens focal length. There is a lens known as a Barlow that bends the light rays from the objective farther down the focal axis toward the ocular end of the tube extending the focal length of the objective lens, which increases magnification, and increases the scope length. On the flip side, the collector lens appears to do the opposite of a Barlow, in that the collector bends the rays from the objective so that they converge sooner on the focal axis, which effectively shortens the focal length of the objective, decreasing magnification and allowing for a shorter scope tube length. Frank, I'm guessing that all of your lenses are double convex, with each lens having an equal focal length on each side of the lens (which means both sides are ground with the same curvature). I'm not saying that all the lenses have the same focal length. Let me know if I'm off track on your setup. Anyway, the focal length of a lens is where all the light rays passing through the vertical axis of your lens, no matter what the distance above or below the horizontal center of the lens, will converge and cross the horizontal axis through your scope tube. The focal length is the distance from a lens to its focal point. You can put your cross-hairs at any focal point, though it's easier to repair the wires if you put them in front of the ocular lens extension. The focal length of your 1st lens plus the focal length of your 2nd lens gives you the spacing between those two lenses, and so on. Adding additional lenses will increase magnification, but each lens supposedly reduces light transmission to the next lens by about 4%. I haven't looked at the various coatings to see how that changes things.
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