Finally got a microscope big enough to work under. I did a few leads of a QFP64 and giggled a little.
(Attachment Link)
A 150W halogen illuminator with 35" heavy-duty fiber-optic ring-light provides the smoothest overhead lighting possible. Active cooling and auto-shutoff avoids overheating in strenuous environments.
QuoteA 150W halogen illuminator with 35" heavy-duty fiber-optic ring-light provides the smoothest overhead lighting possible. Active cooling and auto-shutoff avoids overheating in strenuous environments.Wow.
Have fun !
QuoteA 150W halogen illuminator with 35" heavy-duty fiber-optic ring-light provides the smoothest overhead lighting possible. Active cooling and auto-shutoff avoids overheating in strenuous environments.Wow.
Have fun !
Perhaps I'm the exception, but I gave up with ring illuminators on microscopes as I found they get in the way of tools, in particular the hot air gun. Instead I use a pair of 3W LED narrow spots on goosenecks mounted opposite each other clamped to the microscope.
Finally got a microscope big enough to work under. I did a few leads of a QFP64 and giggled a little.
(Attachment Link)
A stash of banana jacks. Building of small boxes with unsafe terminals can now continue.
A stash of banana jacks. Building of small boxes with unsafe terminals can now continue.
Finally got a microscope big enough to work under. I did a few leads of a QFP64 and giggled a little.
(Attachment Link)
May I ask you, if you can measure the maximum eye distance (mid-mid) of the okulars?
I had ordered a trinokular only to find the eye distance some millimeters too short for my obviously XXXL head and sold it again.
I now settled with the zoom camera, Dave made a video about. But that's no stereoscopic view of course.
May I ask you, if you can measure the maximum eye distance (mid-mid) of the okulars?
A stash of banana jacks. Building of small boxes with unsafe terminals can now continue.
"Unsafe" depends on the use, not just the terminal.
McBryce.
I'm on the lookout for about a half dozen of them, in red and black, only in a solderable inline form. To use as extension leads to binding posts that are further away than a few feet.
Actually arrived today from Bulgaria to Oz in 10 days eBay auction: #173847478655 100' (30m) of Teflon covered silver plated wire. Quick 4W test got 4.4 for the roll so 0.144 /m so test voltages only.
Same seller and still to arrive a few more LM399H VRefs to play with eBay auction: #173362279991
Actually arrived today from Bulgaria to Oz in 10 days eBay auction: #173847478655 100' (30m) of Teflon covered silver plated wire. Quick 4W test got 4.4 for the roll so 0.144 /m so test voltages only.
Same seller and still to arrive a few more LM399H VRefs to play with eBay auction: #173362279991
I see $audiofoolery in your future.
US $25 (a few hours left on the sale)...couldn't resist...well, I could, but I really like toys
https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1626703-REG/sunpak_sp_4k_ac_kit_4k_action_9_piece_camera.html
QuoteA 150W halogen illuminator with 35" heavy-duty fiber-optic ring-light provides the smoothest overhead lighting possible. Active cooling and auto-shutoff avoids overheating in strenuous environments.Wow.
Have fun !
Perhaps I'm the exception, but I gave up with ring illuminators on microscopes as I found they get in the way of tools, in particular the hot air gun. Instead I use a pair of 3W LED narrow spots on goosenecks mounted opposite each other clamped to the microscope.
May I ask you, if you can measure the maximum eye distance (mid-mid) of the okulars?
My Wild M3Z adjusts from, 45-75mm. I use it at about 70mm.
Finally got a microscope big enough to work under. I did a few leads of a QFP64 and giggled a little.
(Attachment Link)
May I ask you, if you can measure the maximum eye distance (mid-mid) of the okulars?
I had ordered a trinokular only to find the eye distance some millimeters too short for my obviously XXXL head and sold it again.
I now settled with the zoom camera, Dave made a video about. But that's no stereoscopic view of course.
Looks like 3" and they are linked so one moves the other.
A stash of banana jacks. Building of small boxes with unsafe terminals can now continue.