Nine gone, six left. I wonder if she's surprised that they're selling so quickly?
And on that note, time to hit the sack. I really need to try to quell my nocturnal tendencies. (Of course I say that every day, then wind up staying awake until after four AM anyway.)
-Pat
I don't. Still haven't finished my first coffee yet



Today arrivals:
- a new keyboard from Logitech
Please tell me they are red cherry key.
Mechanische Romer-G Switches
Strapazierfähigkeit: 70 Millionen Tastenanschläge
Betätigungsweg: 1,5 mm
Auslösungsdruck: 45 g
Tastenhub insgesamt: 3,2 mm
https://www.logitechg.com/de-de/products/gaming-keyboards/g413-mechanical-gaming-keyboard.920-008304.html#product-tech-specs
Bonus round.Triangle and Square wave.
And there go the slide rules and calculators again.![]()
They’re not “great” encoders. Better than the Rigol ones. Let us know how it goes later when you get home.


...forum members offer information suggesting that the attack vector is most likely vulnerabilities in old firmware. A member of the Cr1ptT0r team confirmed this to us, saying that there are so many vulnerabilities in D-Link DNS-320 NAS models that they should be built from scratch to make things better. Although old versions of the firmware for DNS-320 are known to be vulnerable to at least one bug leading to remote code execution, a hard-coded backdoor was published in 2018 for ShareCenter DNS‑320L.
They’re not “great” encoders. Better than the Rigol ones. Let us know how it goes later when you get home.
I'd expect them to be functional though.
These are sending the scales in random directions and magnitudes.
Are they mechanical or optical?


They’re not “great” encoders. Better than the Rigol ones. Let us know how it goes later when you get home.
I'd expect them to be functional though.
These are sending the scales in random directions and magnitudes.
Are they mechanical or optical?
They’re not “great” encoders. Better than the Rigol ones. Let us know how it goes later when you get home.
I'd expect them to be functional though. These are sending the scales in random directions and magnitudes. Are they mechanical or optical?
They are Bourns mechanical encoders which were specifically designed for the scopes and are contacting the board. If you get get under one, switch cleaner will work. They are plastic pin welded to the board and unobtanium usually but you can regularly find recycled TDS parts on ebay.
Picture of a "naked" board - encoder plugs into it and is melted behind...
Edit:
This is 100V (noisy): https://cb.wunderkis.de/wk-pub/mvi/100V.ogg
This is 10V (stable): https://cb.wunderkis.de/wk-pub/mvi/10V.ogg
Hope the videos work, with my Firefox they do. Don't nail me on the 40ppm @10V, the Keithley 196 doesn't do that and it's drifting anyway (and is on my repair stack), but it has a nice red LED starburst display and shows nicely the noise / unstability of the 5100B @100V.

They’re not “great” encoders. Better than the Rigol ones. Let us know how it goes later when you get home.
I'd expect them to be functional though.
These are sending the scales in random directions and magnitudes.
Are they mechanical or optical?
mnem
I think I may have said this recently but... KILL IT. KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!
They’re not “great” encoders. Better than the Rigol ones. Let us know how it goes later when you get home.
I'd expect them to be functional though.
These are sending the scales in random directions and magnitudes.
Are they mechanical or optical?I have seen an article on this problem in the past but cannot remember where it was. IIRC the cure was to carefully drill a very small hole in the encoder housing and only allowing the drill to just break though and no more, sucking the swarf away as you dill slowly to keep it from entering inside and the dowsing the inside with contact cleaner and operating the control a few times, after which it worked perfectly. Do a Google search and you might be lucky and find the article.
Edit:
This is 100V (noisy): https://cb.wunderkis.de/wk-pub/mvi/100V.ogg
This is 10V (stable): https://cb.wunderkis.de/wk-pub/mvi/10V.ogg
Hope the videos work, with my Firefox they do. Don't nail me on the 40ppm @10V, the Keithley 196 doesn't do that and it's drifting anyway (and is on my repair stack), but it has a nice red LED starburst display and shows nicely the noise / unstability of the 5100B @100V.
Unfortunately the drift of Fluke 510XB, on voltages from 20V onwards, seems to be intrinsic of this calibrator.
Indeed the ripple at the output of the high voltage module can have a value of max 30 mV peak-peak.
Also for this reason this calibrator is declared from Fluke up to 4.5 digits.
However, an anomalous ripple is often due to the degradation of the two capacitors C10 and C11 on the A16 Extended High Voltage board