Hi ,
I Have Great Caps Collections Cos i Use Them In Motherboards .Please Tell Me What All You Requires .
Caps :
Usage ,Capacitance and Tolerance
Op Amps
anything You Have in Mnd
yea m talkin of audio grade opamps and caps...board caps wnt do.
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Hi ,
I Have Great Caps Collections Cos i Use Them In Motherboards .Please Tell Me What All You Requires .
Caps :
Usage ,Capacitance and Tolerance
Op Amps
anything You Have in Mnd
sangram said:Yup. Enclosures, cabinets, racks, stands, isolators, that sort of stuff.
@Amarbir: I use (or rather don't use) a unbranded hot-air station. I gave up as I figured you need the right tools and solder to work with it, and went back to a cheap little micro station for SMD work. It does fine for that task, and the tip temperature is too low to damage the components. It basically means I need two irons as most of the work I do is a mix of TH and SMD. For TH and almost all my other stuff I use a Soldron, which works fine but the spade tip means it's a tad tough to get into tight spaces, plus it's showing battle scars.
Also I think the request for caps is for audio-grade caps/opamps. The low-ESR types you use in power sections of motherboards may work well, but those values are usually too large. I have to import mine every time, though I wised up quickly and ordered a bulk quantity. I'm all stocked up for a couple of years at least.
Sangram ,
Well Those Unbranded Hot Air Soldering stations Do Work .I Can Teach You The Right Method in This thread And Some Tricks i Use .Give Up The Solderon Soldering Iron And Migrate To Better Irons ,Cos The Branded Irons Like The Goot ,Hakko Have A Iron clad Tip Means If The Iron is On And You Have To Go Out And Once You Come Back Just Swipe On The water Clad Sponge and Bingo it Becomes Factory New .This Is Not True For Indian Iron Manufacturers Cos They Use Tinned Copper Tips ,That is Shit .
sangram said:I just wish there was more to choose from than just the regular spade tip, it makes it tough to reach small spots, something the conical-tipped Goots make it easy to do.
sangram said:The Soldron is like a toy with a tiny lead, and it keeps falling on the cord itself, burning through it. I've lost more irons to punctured power cords than element failure.
sangram said:Thanks for the tip :rofl: I hate using the air station, not that I can't. I almost took out the first board I used it on, then went back to the Soldron. I last used it to repair a motherboard that had some condensation between layers and a severed PCB track due to screwdriver damage.
On irons: Copper tips actually work better for me as RoHS solder eats away iron quicker than you can say 'lead-free'. Actually it corrodes both iron and copper, iron just wears away a little quicker. I use both leaded and lead-free solder, so I keep a supply of tips on hand. I just wish there was more to choose from than just the regular spade tip, it makes it tough to reach small spots, something the conical-tipped Goots make it easy to do.
Iron leads to a more stable tip temperature for sure, but copper reaches optimum temperature quicker, so I guess both have their uses. The reasons I have for the better irons are the quality of the power cord and hopefully the balance. The Soldron is like a toy with a tiny lead, and it keeps falling on the cord itself, burning through it. I've lost more irons to punctured power cords than element failure.
Anyway, I'd be interested in some opamps and caps myself, so let me know what you can get. These usually are very expensive in small quantities, but if you can buy in bulk and sell us small units it would be great. Here's a quick list:
Burr-Brown/Texas: OPA2134, OPA549, TPA6111, THS4032
National: LME49720, 49710, LM3886, LM3875
Analog: AD797, AD8599
This should keep things going for peeps here for some time. I would advise offer the SMD version and your adapters for the TH requests. Just two options in single, three in duals and one or two in quads should be enough so you needn't keep a very large inventory.
Caps: Nichicon Muse KZ, Muse ES, Panasonic ECA, FC and FM, and Elna Silmic in about 4 sizes till 100uf, 50V or so is fine for almost all uses. I woulda said Black Gates but those are freely available in small quantities with cheap shipping, all over the web.
Gaurish said:Amarbir, I am also Interested in LIRC. Circuit is simple and parts are available easily. they cost around 40-50bucks. But due to lack to time, i am unable to make one for myself
LIRC - Linux Infrared Remote Control
How to build an IR receiver
WinLIRC Homepage
Mates ,
i was interested in getting your feedback on this .I have been a electronic freak since childhood .I have Most of the electronic Instruments That i use for my repairs with Me .Was interested To Know that Would you People Out Here Have Any Interest In
1 :soldering And Desoldering Instruments
2 :Test and Measurement Projects
- Soldering Irons ,Soldering stations ,Desoldering Tools And stations ,Hot Air stations ,IR Rework stations
3 :Electronic Projects And Training Kits
- Multimeters ,Clamp Meters ,Other Meters ,EPROM/MCU Programmers ,Programming Adapters Etc
4 :Electronic Books
- All TYpe Of Projects Kits and Training Kits Like Atmel ,PIC Etc Development Board ,FPGA/CPLD Kits Etc
5 :Electronic Components
- Well some Kinda Repair Books In english And Hindi
I Plan to start Some Dealer Order and Group Orders On these Items Too
mod-the-pc said:@Amarbir, I know that this involves electrical stuff but still wanted to ask you. Will you be able to make a device that'll turn on a flourescent light as scheduled (say 11AM to 11PM) ? I need one for my aquarium. Also let me know the cost