| Products > Test Equipment |
| Repair of a Vintage Simpson 461-2 DMM |
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| Excavatoree:
Thanks. I've got one of those, and I may need to do that. By the way, does yours take some strange battery? I can't figure out what mine is suppose to use. (So I use alligator clips and a power supply) |
| retiredcaps:
--- Quote from: xrunner on February 22, 2015, 12:08:33 am ---If you need to know how to remove the innards from these types of banked switches for cleaning the trick is shown below. 8) --- End quote --- Good repair and restoration. Thanks for the tip on these switches. I will have to remember this thread for the future. |
| xrunner:
--- Quote from: Excavatoree on February 22, 2015, 01:52:05 am ---By the way, does yours take some strange battery? I can't figure out what mine is suppose to use. (So I use alligator clips and a power supply) --- End quote --- It came with two NiCad packs, each of which which consisted of two smaller NiCads shrink-wrapped together. Of course they were no good. It will run off of 4 AA batteries but it's not made to hold them as such, unless you shrink-wrapped two together to make on long battery like the original had. I don't plan on ever doing that, just run it off the charger jack, it works just fine that way (assuming it's fixed like mine isn't yet :)) --- Quote from: retiredcaps on February 22, 2015, 03:39:17 am ---Good repair and restoration. Thanks for the tip on these switches. I will have to remember this thread for the future. --- End quote --- Thanks. I'm just going to pull out all the switch insides now, and clean them. Hopefully the LEDs will show up early this coming week. |
| xrunner:
And now a plastic piece that holds a brass insert for the rear screw popped off. Glued back on with model cement. :palm: |
| xrunner:
The vintage LEDs arrived today. Meter is looking good! I think we're on the downhill side of this project now. :clap: |
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