Your workshop :)
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Just looked on ebay, and here is one a bit cheaper that comes with a basic case.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/LCR-T4-Mega328-Transistor-Tester-Diode-Triode-Capacitance-ESR-Meter-MOS-NPN-PNP-/222247985900?var=&hash=item33bf0322ecmLakYynk0RqdZT62qrYQfdw
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if you want the case it costs 10$. The one I posted it seems to have pretty much the same specs, but it can detect also IR and probably some more components. It also comes with a lithium battery instead of the classic 9V, color screen and the case looks much better
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@gohan You are right. I just ordered the thing. With the case and the builtin battery it looks like a real tool. The price seems to be a promotion. Normal price is >30$.
You shoult by the way fix the link. Makes it easier for others to order it.I am looking for a soldering vise. Has anyone tested this one: https://www.amazon.de/dp/B00196RV9C/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_S_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=2COJS1QZ6SUVJ&coliid=IQEGMI1GM2R46 ?
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Fixed the link; anyway it is a recurring promotion because I have seen that price for quite a while
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@gohan Then you can safely lean back and wait for my review.
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I have something similar on my workbench. Very useful.
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nice wall decoration for a workshop
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I didn't select the wallpaper....
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@Jan-Gatzke I have this one:
It's able to hold all kinds of PCB sizes and can rotate easily.
Tip for soldering through-hole components from the back without them falling out:
Place all components on the top of the PCB and put a sponge or scotch-brite on top of them. Fix to the PCB with some rubber bands and swap the PCB to solder!
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@Yveaux I saw that thing on Amazon. There was a review saying the brackets would melt easily when using hot air. Did you use this with hot air?
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@Jan-Gatzke said in Your workshop :
There was a review saying the brackets would melt easily when using hot air.
When you clamp a PCB in it only the edges are held by the plastic brackets.
Unless you are blowing directly on the edge of the PCB where it is held I can imagine this could be a problem, but then, why don't you shift or rotate the PCB to get away from the brackets?Did you use this with hot air?
Yes
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@gohan Be aware that there are quite a few different versions around. The one I posted has a rotary encoder to select and operate the pwm and frequency functions. The perspex casing fits well with the rest of the nerdy testboxes I own (dummy load, power supply, a few function generators, frequencycounter ) All a lot of functionality for very little..
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Aren't these devices basically Arduinos? It's written on the title atmega328. If so if we could get our hands on the code, we could make our own
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Nice to see in what environment others spend their time.
There are a lot of electronic hobbyists out there! They have more (and more) stuff than coders.
I hope that bjornhallberg has a nice desk by now..
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I noticed the many of you have an oscilloscope on their desk. What exactly do you use these for? There seems to be nothing under 200$ and I wonder if it is worth it.
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There is also a cheap portable one under 100$, but it all depends how far you want to push yourself into electronics.
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@Jan-Gatzke For MySensor I use it mostly for measuring response times and get a general idea of what is happening timewise. Especially if you have multiple event happening at the same time. Also for getting a grip on low power
it gives a lot of information which would be very hard to measure with any other instrument. (for my other hobby, analog audio design, I couldn't live without it. ;-))
A few considerations:
- It can be rather complicated using a scope in first instance. (a steep learning curve)
- Unless you are just curious and want to educate yourself I would strongly disencourage buying a cheap instrument. Better to study a few manuals of serious > €300 instruments, save a little and buy the thing you need (or can't resist). 10 years ago you had to put down > €1000 for something reasonable.
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@AWI Troubleshooting power probolems with the nrf24 is a good example, thx. I think at the beginning it is more a nice to have than a must have. I am always curios for such things. Still I don't want to buy trash. I will read a bit and watch ebay for good offers. Thx for your explanation.
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As i'm actually tidying up thing, i can show some pics where i spend some tinkering time.
I'm planning to renovate it, because i'm also missing place for my 3d printer and some others stuff.
There is a lathe and a drill but it's for quick hurry work, there is another room for more dirty mechanical stuff.. but i can't show you, it's dirty
My favorite tools :- my super mini TS100 solder iron. But if you ask me, for tiny SMD like DFN for instance, i prefer my Weller Magnastat with a 0.2mm tip. The tip is thinner even if i've bought the thinnest tip for the TS100.
- hacked Rigol Ds1054Z. Really worth the price!
- hacked T962 reflow oven. Very cool too (better for leaded solder though)
- smd books
- my magnifier of course!
for the rest, there are also great tools like power supply, a spectrum analyzer, generators..
My 1st 3d printer, i like it, works very well. I'm planning to build a new, bigger and enclosed one.Talking about soldering vise, i have this old tool i don't use it often, but when i need it, i'm happy to have it.
I'm pretty sure this is not hard to reproduce with some T-Slots and so onWhen you have a 3d printer, this thingiverse design can be helpful, for debugging stuff, or can be used for soldering but with care else plastic would melt.
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:801279
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I've been using new induction solderind gun for the last month. It is fantastiс. It has 120W power and warms up to 330С during 6-8s
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I am thinking to move to a soldering station, I looked at a hakko that looks quite decent for the price. What do you think?
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I've got the feeling this thread is going to be extreme expensive for me.
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@scalz Your 3D printer looks like some of the CoreXY rebuilds I have seen some people do. I have an open frame Anet A8 that is doing fairly well. These are the ones that I have seen the CoreXY mods done on.
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@scalz - that might be the most equipped workshop I have ever seen! So cool!
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@gohan
clone soldering station? I have no xp about clones, but i know genuine Hakko have great reviews.
Problem with clones is they often have a bad temperature regulation, meaning you set to a temperature, and you get something too low or too high at the tip. Not so cool.
This youtube video is interesting to see the difference (not about hakko though)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEEaLMv6dog
It confirmed to me to buy the TS100 but that's also because i wanted something mobile.
Not so easy to advice a solder station depends on what you need, perhaps hakko clone are reasonable choice but one sure thing, is clones or not, the tip quality is very important, and better to choose genuine for this.@dbemowsk yep this is corexy. i choosed corexy system for its advantages. My next one will be another corexy (was tempted by delta) but this time 35x35cmx30 and with V-Slots and V-Wheels..
@sundberg84 yes very geek workshop, for maker, i enjoy it sure
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I am one of those, but honestly I don't know if I'll ever have the time to use all that stuff
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It's not who's got the most stuff that wins. It's what you actually end up building.
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@scalz your workshop is really profesional. It is golden opportunity for infinitely creativity. And of course it is extremely clear. I am impressed
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@scalz - I would love to have your setup dude! Your coreXY printer looks a little bulky underneath and taking up some build volume but i'm guessing you never hit a problem with that anyway so no issues. I too like the CoreXY designs. I think my next one will be a D-Bot as i've printed about 6 sets of parts for that printer for people and it seems a very solid printer. My current one is a Wilson 2 design (will upload some more photos here soon of my equipment), but would like a second one. However, as i still live at home with my parent, having an area like you have is just not available for me right now
I'm a Hakko user, and i would like to ask you to not purchase a fake. Not only are they bad at temperature regulation, they are also very unsafe from what i have read. Purchase at your own risk! I use a FX888D, i would prefer the analogue version with the knob on the front but this does the same but with a slightly more awkward temperature adjustment. Heat-up time is very quick and that is the huge added bonus for me.
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@Samuel235 i know the d-bot, it's a nice printer (mine is older). but i'm planning to use as much as possible aluminium on my next one. I think it's too bad to use aluminium slots, with printed parts for the corners etc.. So i've picked ideas from multiple designs to make a new custom one.
There are still a few tools i'm missing though
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@scalz - I love to see custom hybrids of solid printers! If you make a blog post or something on your new build at any point please drop me a link to it so i can have a look
What could you possibly be missing when you're doing this at a hobby level? o.O
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@Samuel235 said in Your workshop :
What could you possibly be missing when you're doing this at a hobby level? o.O
Laser cutter?
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@Yveaux - He doesn't need any more encoraging!
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I have to say, my slightly modded Anet A8 printer that I bought recently has been doing pretty good. I had been looking at some point to migrating the electronics to a coreXY frame, but that probably won't be any time soon.Besides, it does what I need for now..
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@dbemowsk - If you only want it to do what you need it to do then you're all good. I'm a little bit of a perfectionist and whether or not i need it to have a feature, i tend to attempt to get the printer to have that feature anyway. But at the end of the day if you're only using it for personal things and it does everything you want it to, then there is no need to change
What i will say though is: I thought that i would be okay with just a RAMPS and arduino board, but i pushed the boat out and went for a DUET WIFI board, and damn these things are beautiful to use!
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@Samuel235 So do you have dual extruders?
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@dbemowsk - I don't. And right now i'm not even thinking about it as i've done my far share of detailed printing and i do not wish to print anything slow and small scale that requires 0.08 mm layer heights and support everywhere. My printer has been on solid for the last 88 hours on 4 prints doing exactly that.
I'm trying to slowly approach my maximum speed, printing comfortably at 60mm/s at the moment but would like a little more. My printer is pretty basic still, i'm still a student living at home so i'm saving money everywhere i can right not but as soon as i have no income issues, dual extruder, advanced bed probing, enclosure, quick change hotends with a tornado extruder maybe.
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@gohan said in Your workshop :
Aren't these devices basically Arduinos? It's written on the title atmega328. If so if we could get our hands on the code, we could make our own
I finally found the place where the Chinese get their code and design for the "Transistortester". It comes from a german site
a very extensive project. I doubt if I will ever be able to match or even comprehend what they accomplished.
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@AWI great digging!
The specs and list of functions are impressive.
Do you think the Chinese hardware is an identical copy of this design?
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@Yveaux said in Your workshop :
Do you think the Chinese hardware is an identical copy of this design?
Why not? Chinese are great at copying stuff
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@gohan said in Your workshop :
Why not? Chinese are great at copying stuff
Yes, and they're great in optimizing for cost; as long as any signal comes out, all components will be removed/replaced by cheaper ones...
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@Yveaux I soldered the thing myself so build quality is .... The board I received looks to be solid as well as the components.
Accuracy in resistor/ capacitor meaurement is fine (~5% which is also the toleration of the components tested) Semiconductor analysis is enough for me with Fet / Junction transistors as I can determine the most important characteristics (including the pin layout!) which are within 10% of the datasheet. (pins are 100% correct :-))
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@AWI did you order the parts or did you make the tester on your own with the parts you had?
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@gohan I used a kit. There is also a description and suggestions on improvement of the "Chinese clones" in the documentation of the project.
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@AWI "I soldered the thing myself so build quality is ...."
I guess the missing word is: "top", and the last dot is just interpunction.
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@core_c Thanks, I missed that
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I got my 2017 transistor tester and since the cost for the pre-assembled was not far off from the kit, I did go the lazy way and I have to say the soldering quality seems OK.
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I need little advice: is it worth buying the Ts100 soldering iron for 50€ + some accessories (holder and one extra tip, I already have a laptop power supply I can use) or go for a Hakko FX-888D for 120€ (you get holder in the price and extra tips cost significantly lower but I don't know if I ever need many different sizes)?
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@gohan Imho - TS100 is beautiful toy, nice gadget, but not really useful tool. TS100 iron has much less ergonomics in comparation with others soldering stations. I recommend buy it only as extra tool, not main tool
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After changing my HA and network to new location I made some changes to my workshop. Still some work in progress.
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@sundberg84 we have the same model of soldering iron, hot air gun, and multimeter. And we might end up having a similar power supply too, as I'll build one sooner or later.
But my stack of unused EasyPCBs is a bit smaller
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@yveaux said in Your workshop :
@sundberg84 said in Your workshop :
Still some work in progress.
And some big spider to kill...
That is Hugo. He has been around since I was a kid. Hard to kill since he is made of plastic but loves to scare new people.
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@nca78 - haha, thats nice I been thinking about changing my power supply though. Posting to much images isnt good for you On my swedish blog I had a guy explaining about relative ground. When I probe around with my oscilloscope and power the electronics with my PSU they are not the same ground and this can apparently create some magic smoke. So far so good and I have been to lazy to learn more about the theory (Im sure there are people here with great knowledge about this) but the advice was to change my PSU to a "real" one.
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So many space, I jealous
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So I had to replace a micro USB connector on a tablet the other day. So to get the old connector off, I used my heat gun which is similar to the one pictured below. It worked okay and I was able to get the connector off.
I have been wanting to get a hot air re-work station for a while now. I was looking at the picture of @sundberg84 's workshop and I saw that he had an 858D, so I searched that on ebay. I noticed that there are a variety of 858D stations out there ranging from $30 to $121 US. They all look very similar as far as front panel controls and functionality. My question is, is there a big difference between the lower and higher priced units? I guess, if I get one of the $30 units, is it going to fall apart sooner than one of the others?
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@dbemowsk i bought mine used from England. It was in the cheaper price range. Works great so far and this is ok for me.
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@sundberg84 Thanks, hard to tell from your picture, but does yours have the cord for the wand going directly into the base, or is it on a connector that plugs into the front? I noticed that most of the more expensive ones have a removable/replaceable wand, but everything else looks to be about the same. I will probably just order the $30 one and see how it goes.
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@dbemowsk I bought from AliExpress in the cheapest price range too (but not so cheap with shipping) and it's been working very well until now.
I bought this model, it's not available any more but there are plenty of seller with the exact same brand and model (Youyue 858D+), with extra nozzles (I had 3 only, now it seems 6 is standard) and accessories (I had none):
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Hot-Air-Gun-700W-UYUE-858D-ESD-Soldering-Station-LED-Digital-Heat-Gun-Desoldering-Station-Upgrade/32657929118.htmlI opened it after reception to check for the common safety problems that were reported with first versions of the 858D/D+ models and it was safely wired and earthed.
It's also show the right temperature when overheating (it was not the case in the first models) so you know when to wait to avoid burning your board (don't worry this is only happening at start-up when it's heating fast from ambient temperature).
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@nca78 They have a youyue 858D and it is $92 and another for $63. The ones I am looking at are these for $30 with free shipping:
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Found an old post at eeevblog, where they hacked the Youyue heat gun. It was using atmega328p, so I am considering that one (even though they might have changed hardware since then. You'll never know what the sneaky people are doing ;))
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@tbowmo So what improvements/changes did they do with the hack?
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@dbemowsk better PID tuning etc.
More info here https://www.eevblog.com/forum/reviews/youyue-858d-some-reverse-engineering-custom-firmware/
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Still need to do some setup and sorting of things, but here are some pics of my newly remodeled workshop area.
I really need to get rid of that old Leader analog scope and get myself a DSO. It is a conversation piece though. I have it connected to my old heathkit square/sine wave audio function generator. Does anyone have a recommendation on a cheaper DSO that would be good for microcontroller work?
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I moved my desk to a new spot in the house and reoriented the desk. Still a mess, but that is how my mind seems to work these days: lots of stuff in parallel ...
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Multiple parallel projects is a common problem
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@gertsanders so that's what kept you busy last 7 months!
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@gohan Agreed. I have up to 5+ going at any given time. That way I have something to do when one project goes stale or gets put on hold for a while.
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@yveaux indeed. It seems there is always some other thing to do first. Moving my desk was part of a greater reorganisation of desks and rooms. I set myself deadlines to be able to advance a little (next one is 16 May: lasercutting boxes at the FabLab), but still progress is slow.
The fact that my switch to version 2.2.0 on sensors and on ethernetgateway on Raspberry is not going well, also slows down progress. Step by step ...
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@gertsanders said in Your workshop :
The fact that my switch to version 2.2.0 on sensors and on ethernetgateway on Raspberry is not going well, also slows down progress. Step by step ...
Well, if you need any help or have suggestions how to make the transition more smooth, you know where to find us!
Good to have you back on the forum though
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@yveaux I'm not sure the issues is with the MySensors part. The gateway listens, but presenting a new node crashes Domoticz. After reboot I do see the new sensor and can receive and show updates, but the "new node" part is what bugs me now (I made a new node with atmega1284p which I want to add to my network)
I am using the beta version of the gateway & Domoticz
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@gertsanders said in Your workshop :
I am using the beta version of the gateway
Why are you using a beta version? I thought 2.2.0 was in stable release?
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@dbemowsk like to push my luck I guess
It seems the latest Domoticz beta (9379 build date 28.04.18-09:18:07) has a problem with presentation of new sensors. So I will have to sweat it until they fix that.
I compiled the gateway on Raspberry also with the beta version (after trying the stable version first), as it was mentioned that this could fix communication errors. No luck so far.
Bu this discussion of my problem should be on another forum branch.
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Use the 2.2 stable, your is not a radio communication issue.
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@gohan
Indeed, it is a Domoticz beta issue
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As I have updated my workshop, so I no longer sit at my family kitchen table, but instead have a man-cave, behind a sliding-door closet, next to the water-heater
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@bjacobse something is wrong, it's way to organized
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@tbowmo
Well I must admit, it's just put in place - which means I have not yet started to use it - It must be messy when in use
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resurrecting this old thread
I got thrown out of my old mancave, and in to a small corner in the main building (the oldest son, aged 21, needed a place to stay, as his 19 year old sister didn't want to share room with him)
Anyways, I have moved from a 240x60cm desk to a 120x80 desk, and no storage space around me, other than a small office cabinet on wheels. Which means that I have to constrain myself, and find some alternative setups. As I have to work from home these days due to corona, I treated myself with a monitor mount for my 3 screens.
As a bonus, I can now use the space below the monitors for my tools (power supply and soldering iron,and probably the oscilloscope as well, when I get to it). I'm re-arranging stuff every other day, to figure out the best setup, and remove cable clutter (which isn't easy).
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@tbowmo is that KDE?
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@monte said in Your workshop :
@tbowmo is that KDE?
Nope, Ubuntu / gnome, but with a tool bar at the bottom of the screen.
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@tbowmo nice! I was too lazy to open full-size image
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@tbowmo
Looks really good, hope you will spend many good hours doing some fun stuff
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@bjacobse thanks, hope so too.
Just looked back into the thread, I posted a picture of my old workshop back in 2016, still the same tools around, just a smaller desk to work on.
/ Thomas
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I thought I'd share a part of my 'workshhop'. Only part of it due the rest being in a bit of a mess at the moment, so here is the 'good' bit......
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@skywatch if this is the good & organised bit I would die to see the rest
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OMG...
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@skywatch that is looking very good, but why would you measure the wind speed of your workshop?
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@Yveaux - I don't think it is really worth dying over
@mtiutiu - I guess you are referring to the lack of beer on the bench. Don't worry I will be sorting that out very soon!
@dzjr I eat a lot of hot spicy food and you can never be too careful!
Actually the wind speed anemometer is something I 3D printed. The problem is that I need to calibrate it and since I don't have access to a wind tunnel I was thining of securing it to the car and driving at different speeds to note the readings.
Only 2 problems I have found with that so far. 1 - In the UK there are very few calm days. 2 - We have been in lockdown for nearly 2 months and I can't go out to test it.
So it just sits there mocking me for going to all the trouble of creating it in the first place!
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I assumed that my desk was a kind of a mess... but now I realize it's just average!
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@MatiasV No-no, you need much more stuff before it will be "average"
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@bjacobse I agree - when I was putting mine together I could see the desk top. But now it is in constant use 'building' I never know what I will find underneath something!