so i am looking to compile some relatively decent hardware: soldering pencil, benchtop power supply, oscilloscope, and more if i have a need (i already have a nice multimeter)anyone have any good recommendations, i dont need top of the line because right now that would just be throwing money away, but i do want something that is going is somewhat quality, if the difference is $50 bucks between crap and good stuff, that is worth it, if its $500 bucks what is an intermediate product? i am looking at weller soldering stuff and some mastech items on ebayi have no idea where to begin with the oscilloscope what do you people use? pictures of snazzy setups?
11/3/2008 1:28:30 PM
1) get a job where they have a nice lab and 2) get enough seniority to not have questions asked for anything you do3) and chum up the lab manager (somewhat optional)4) profit...a few more steps than normal... but Using the lab at work after hours is way more efficient than trying to get your own stuff... The Scopes worth buying are $500 at last checkI haven't found Analog Oscopes that are cheap to be much use.Power supplies you pay for the transformer and ripple... so if you want to source enough to power audio amplifiers be prepared to pay for them... shipping will be $70 alone since they weigh 75lbsSoldering irons you can get for cheap on ebay... if you want to really do neat stuff you need the dual station metcals.Frequency generators are easy to come by cheap.[Edited on November 3, 2008 at 1:48 PM. Reason : but I haven't looked into this stuff in at least 3 years]
11/3/2008 1:46:11 PM
11/3/2008 1:59:46 PM
Scope: I just bought a LeCroy WaveMaster A620A scope. 6GHz, 4x20GS/s, real-time waveshape analysis, etc. Power supply: California Instruments iXII, 6kVA up to 400V (AC,DC, AC+DC). Variable voltage, frequency, and high crest factor capable. Has arbitrary waveform generation when hooked up to PC.Soldering iron: some generic Weller temperature-controlled stationMultimeter: I use a Fluke 287. Anything that measures true-rms, frequency, etc.
11/3/2008 2:09:18 PM
You're kidding, right?
11/3/2008 4:23:14 PM
^^ Are you saying you just bought a $50,000 scope for personal use?
11/3/2008 5:17:24 PM
Oscilloscope: An old Tektronix 485 oscilliscope I got from dannydigtlMultimeter: Radio Shack specialPower Supply: Home madeSoldering iron: WellerFor most of the things I hobby around with (low power analog), more expensive stuff would be nice, but it's not neccessary. I can't really justify the cost. I do have a short wishlist:-A digital o-scope. Nothing too fancy, but I would like the ability to hold a waveform and save it. Tektronix has a couple of relatively inexpensive digital models that I've considered. They're also running a 15% trade-in special through the end of the month.-Power supply. I would like something capable of handling larger loads.A nice soldering station is worth spending a couple of extra bucks on.
11/3/2008 5:50:13 PM
yeah i saw those ones that were <$1000 bucks
11/3/2008 5:59:03 PM
gofigure is spot oneasier to get a job then buy a 10 ghz scope
11/3/2008 7:17:36 PM
fuckin' A, everything mentioned in this thread is overkill... depending on what you're planning to work on, a 10MHz scope is enough for power stuff (induction heating, pulse transformer drivers, etc)... if you're looking to get into high RF stuff, then you may want a nicer scope...You can get by with a 150$ scope (mine is a dual trace 60MHz scope), 50$ multimeter (grabbed mine at Lowes), 150$ LC meter (should probably shop this online), a 10$/40W pen-style soldering iron for boards, and a 20$ 150W gun-style soldering iron for larger wires.When you buy a used scope, MAKE DAMN SURE you test it before you even make an offer. If the scope has a test output use that, if not, stick the probe in a wall socket and look for 60Hz For a power supply, you should shop eBay for an old Variac. I found my 0-280V 7.8kVA Variac for around 150$ shipped with a blown fuse, I suspect because the guy didn't realize that model had internal fusing... realistically you will not find a deal like that unless you buy broken and do your homework, but you should be able to find a 0-140V >=1.5kVA unit for around 50$ easy.
11/3/2008 7:44:22 PM
he didn't say anything implying home use. for all i know he is building a setup at work/school (or whatever he's doing, i think he told me he was in school still).but no, the equipment i bought was for a lab i built at work.
11/3/2008 8:20:49 PM
nah^ i am still at ga tech, but this is just for messing around at home^^ thx for the advice
[Edited on November 3, 2008 at 8:25 PM. Reason :
11/3/2008 8:23:01 PM
11/5/2008 8:02:02 PM
well what would you suggest is a good rate?
11/5/2008 8:05:21 PM
i have no idea what you're trying to do.i measure side projects at work.
11/5/2008 8:11:36 PM
Take nyquist of your switching supply and multiply by 10
11/5/2008 8:22:01 PM
i doubt his goal in personal projects is designing power supplies. who would want to do that?
11/5/2008 8:34:28 PM
11/5/2008 9:35:53 PM