Clever and practical. It may not be a Fluke, but still a good thing to have. And speaking of Fluke... it would be nice to see a microscope that accepts display from the Fluke remote display meters (233 etc.).
When such an instrument has almost everything built in, what about a little fan to keep the soldering fume off the lens. The ideal place for the lens is right above the soldering location.
I mean if you ever run out of room on your bench for a microscope my bench has a perfect spot for one. And I'll always make sure that it's calibrated. ha!
Keeping it calibrated should be easy, since I'm sure they include a full service manual complete with schematic, theory of operation, and calibration instructions. Not.
Making a new red lead doesn't look very hard. Remove the clip and attach it to a red wire and a red croc clip. In general though, a DMM is pretty agnostic about polarity, so does it matter all that much? The 80% use case will be the negative lead clipped to ground and the positive lead, without the clip, roving about taking measurements.
Clever and practical. It may not be a Fluke, but still a good thing to have. And speaking of Fluke... it would be nice to see a microscope that accepts display from the Fluke remote display meters (233 etc.).
What a great idea to have a DVM on screen so you don't have to look away when probing a PCB.
the coming microscope-measurement-signal-generator convergence is gonna be LIT. Needs a sillyscope and a spectrum analyzer.
Those clip leads are insane. Everything else seems to be well executed.
When such an instrument has almost everything built in, what about a little fan to keep the soldering fume off the lens. The ideal place for the lens is right above the soldering location.
I mean if you ever run out of room on your bench for a microscope my bench has a perfect spot for one. And I'll always make sure that it's calibrated. ha!
Keeping it calibrated should be easy, since I'm sure they include a full service manual complete with schematic, theory of operation, and calibration instructions. Not.
Interesting, but i do not measure through microscope very often. It is more about soldering and probing for cracked solder here 🤔
Tell them to add an oscilloscope!
I'm trying to find their firmware to do exactly that.
Making a new red lead doesn't look very hard. Remove the clip and attach it to a red wire and a red croc clip. In general though, a DMM is pretty agnostic about polarity, so does it matter all that much? The 80% use case will be the negative lead clipped to ground and the positive lead, without the clip, roving about taking measurements.
Would be nice if it had a data serial interface to hook a real multimeter like a fluke, to the scope osd pip.