5 Swiss-made PB screwdrivers, 1 flatblade and 4 Torx
€5 in total.
USB cable, new €0.30
HP laptop charger to complement my "drag it everywhere"
ham laptop: € 0.50
Flea market score at the "Koningsdag free market" today.
Bit of cleaning and they are as good as new.
Wilko
Nice! I love PB Swiss screwdrivers - VERY well made. Great score for a fin!
-Pat
My 87V was giving me the low battery indicator so I had to buy a battery for it:
Normally I would go for Panasonic Eneloop. The problem is that Panasonic don't have 9V rechargeable Eneloop.
Now not even C and D size they have, what they have now is adapters where you put one AA and it converts for that size, while before at the beginning when the line was released that option existed.
The next logical selection for me would be the Evolta Series, but in the official Taobao shop they don't sell the 9V Evolta as the rest of the world, only the Alkaline (gold, red and and blue casing) and the Manganese (red and white casing).
They also don't have any lithium offering in their line up for the AA, AAA, C, D and 9V. So since I had tons of other rechargeable batteries from GP Batteries (for the kids toys) I was going to go to their Ultra Plus line up since I've been satisfied with their products.
They just released their own Lithium offering for their line up, I just had to give them a go.
My 87V was giving me the low battery indicator so I had to buy a battery for it:
Do you have a portrait-oriented monitor of about 10,000 pixels height?
My 87V was giving me the low battery indicator so I had to buy a battery for it:
Do you have a portrait-oriented monitor of about 10,000 pixels height?
Don't tell me I fucked up the resize? Since it auto dimensions on the PC (Mozilla) and Phone.
EDIT: yes I fucked up, put the original instead of the resized one.
Sorry.
Reminder to self, stop reading so many posts on the forum it is going to get expensive !
Dave says this is a "free" forum.....yeah right.
You and I are not the first members to notice this either.
robrenz started a thread about it some time back, sorry I cant link the thread.
guilty as charged.......
Muttley
IMHO electronics isnt that expensive a hobby, compared to many others. And its lots of fun...
"Here’s a tough truth for Mac users of a certain vintage to confront: although we might be nostalgic about the Apple of the past, its share price prior to 2004 is pretty much a flat line compared to how it’s doing now. Which is to say, to put it bluntly, that Apple was doing things wrong back then.
But still, that nostalgia persists for us old-timers. Take Clarus, the dogcow, for example. This was a bitmap glyph originally created by Susan Kare for the Cairo dingbat font that came with the original Mac in 1984. But Clarus broke out to become an official mascot of Apple’s Developer Technical Support, and an unofficial symbol of the Mac for the rest of us.
And just look at it! It’s solid, 24-karat whimsy! It’s a purely fictional creature—half dog, half cow—that came into being through quirkiness and serendipity, and you could say it has no business in a grown-up, commercial operating system. It makes no real sense, and wasn’t really there on merit or through strategic planning, yet there it was whenever you chose Page Setup in a document.
"
...
IMHO electronics isnt that expensive a hobby, compared to many others. And its lots of fun...
"Here’s a tough truth for Mac users of a certain vintage to confront: although we might be nostalgic about the Apple of the past, its share price prior to 2004 is pretty much a flat line compared to how it’s doing now. Which is to say, to put it bluntly, that Apple was doing things wrong back then.
But still, that nostalgia persists for us old-timers. Take Clarus, the dogcow, for example. This was a bitmap glyph originally created by Susan Kare for the Cairo dingbat font that came with the original Mac in 1984. But Clarus broke out to become an official mascot of Apple’s Developer Technical Support, and an unofficial symbol of the Mac for the rest of us.
And just look at it! It’s solid, 24-karat whimsy! It’s a purely fictional creature—half dog, half cow—that came into being through quirkiness and serendipity, and you could say it has no business in a grown-up, commercial operating system. It makes no real sense, and wasn’t really there on merit or through strategic planning, yet there it was whenever you chose Page Setup in a document.
"
MOOF!
I didn't buy it today, but around 25 years ago, a T-shirt with Clarus and the caption, "Moof!". Thanks for reminding me, it brought a smile to my face. A picture is worth a thousand words.
I got some free stuff off the internet local for sale. Looks like a PIC programmer that may be repurposable as a eeprom programmer, but it could get bricked trying to do that. Some stuff in there also.
3478A from Valuetronics $195. A bit of nostalgia probably driving this purchase.
The back-up battery is a Panasonic BR 2/3 that reads 3.4V.
The cal data was backed up using lmester's program plus an AR488.
Now that the Shariar Effect
(tm) has worn off a bit from the [
hp] Nixie counter market, time was right to make the counter stable complete(r).
Now that the Shariar Effect(tm) has worn off a bit from the [hp] Nixie counter market, time was right to make the counter stable complete(r).
Be forewarned - the 5245L was the first hit of what turned into my nixie counter habit…. It’s a slippery slope.
-Pat
I just acquired the HP3456A a couple of days ago and the HP5334B a month ago. I'm pretty sure I'll need to seek professional help with my HP TE addiction now.
Bought broken, the counter needed a blown RIFA cap replacement but I also discovered a shorted tantalum on the +12V rail. It has the 1.3GHz C-channel and high-stability oven oscillator options. I'm really happy with this save.
The 3456A is pristine! I think it was mislabeled as broken (needed the GUARD button engaged?) so I got a good price for it. It more or less agrees with my 34401A (10 months out of cal) on all functions but was 20 counts high on DCV. A simple tweak brought it into line. All three multimeters are attached to an ADR4530B reference (0.02% tolerance). I'm lovin' the math features!
However, I've read that the ROMs go bad so I'll first desolder them and put them in sockets. Then I'll burn a new [E]EPROM similar to xDevs' repair (although, I'll put it on a removable daughter board).
Q1: Should I also change the line filter block?
Q2: The filter caps look fine. Should I change them too? The latest chip date codes I see are 8147.
"A man with one
watch meter knows what
time voltage it is. A man with two
watches meters is never sure."
I just acquired the HP3456A a couple of days ago and the HP5334B a month ago. I'm pretty sure I'll need to seek professional help with my HP TE addiction now.
Bought broken, the counter needed a blown RIFA cap replacement but I also discovered a shorted tantalum on the +12V rail. It has the 1.3GHz C-channel and high-stability oven oscillator options. I'm really happy with this save.
The 3456A is pristine! I think it was mislabeled as broken (needed the GUARD button engaged?) so I got a good price for it. It more or less agrees with my 34401A (10 months out of cal) on all functions but was 20 counts high on DCV. A simple tweak brought it into line. All three multimeters are attached to an ADR4530B reference (0.02% tolerance). I'm lovin' the math features!
However, I've read that the ROMs go bad so I'll first desolder them and put them in sockets. Then I'll burn a new [E]EPROM similar to xDevs' repair (although, I'll put it on a removable daughter board). Q1: Should I also change the line filter block? Q2: The filter caps look fine. Should I change them too? The latest chip date codes I see are 8147.
"A man with one watch meter knows what time voltage it is. A man with two watches meters is never sure."
Join us here for 'professional' help with TEA.
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/test-equipment-anonymous-(tea)-group-therapy-thread/ -Pat
No, they love the marinara, not the Bolognese or Alfredo. Yes, it is cruel and unusual punishment. I am absolutely forbidden to make my dearly departed mother's angel hair pasta with olive oil and anchovy sauce served with fresh grated Romano cheese. It brings tears to my eyes. Funny thing, my first wife banned the dish also. I just don't understand.
It might be banned here too because of all the carbs.. Cheese is okay, its got lots of whey protein but the carbs, no. because they are really bad for us.
Thats actually true. The typical US diet is really bad for people because of all the wheat..
Rice isnt that great either.. It will give you type 2 diabetes if you let it. Olive oil is good, safflower or canola oil not so much...
I like the CH341A and various kinds of clips.. very useful..
Last calibration unknown (I can live with it)
Any idea what the set of resistors are worth?
Last calibration unknown (I can live with it)
Impressive!
I have seen such agreement as well on a few 34401A after years of no calibration.
Some of them are just very stable.
up and down the aisles of local hardware shop
got scotch brite and a PP9, just in case
Any Lathe is better than no Lathe
I have been looking at dropping a good chunk of change on a Lathe as my tame go to guy has more or less retired at age 83 and then this rustic toy turned up for sale 5 minutes drive from home for not very much. $300 AUpesos with metric and imperial change gears a little tooling and a faceplate so it will do me while I save likely at least 10X that lot for what I want to get.
Some more trinkets to the test leads:
- 4x Crocodile clips 4mm
- 4x Shrouded to Unshrouded adapters
No, they love the marinara, not the Bolognese or Alfredo. Yes, it is cruel and unusual punishment. I am absolutely forbidden to make my dearly departed mother's angel hair pasta with olive oil and anchovy sauce served with fresh grated Romano cheese. It brings tears to my eyes. Funny thing, my first wife banned the dish also. I just don't understand.
It might be banned here too because of all the carbs.. Cheese is okay, its got lots of whey protein but the carbs, no. because they are really bad for us.
Thats actually true. The typical US diet is really bad for people because of all the wheat..
Rice isn't that great either.. It will give you type 2 diabetes if you let it. Olive oil is good, safflower or canola oil not so much...
I like the CH341A and various kinds of clips.. very useful...
And yet the people you always read about living to a hundred and something are usually Asians living in Asia... and of course,
you know what the primary staple of those diets is. I've been doing keto on/off for over a decade... while I do yo-yo, it's the only diet I've ever actually been able to keep up long enuf to actually lose any appreciable weight due to a back injury which limits my ability to remain standing for any long periods of time. The key for me will be to make it the way I eat all the time, which is really hard in a house full of kids.
But all that misery does make me think... do you suppose maybe Western medicine/dieticians might just
maybe have it
all wrong?
I mean... the people who make our food fill it all with fat
and starch because that is most profitable... the only way to not gain weight on that crap is to not eat it.
mnem
Any Lathe is better than no Lathe $300 AUpesos with metric and imperial change gears...
I'm totes jelly, man. That little beast would do me for
everything I want a lathe for the rest of my life.
Cheers!
mnem
*toolish ol' dwagon*