The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

Author: Ed

  • Hiatus

    We’ll be tackling several long-delayed household projects during the next month. As a consequence, I won’t be doing my usual techie tinkering and will post shop notes only occasionally.

    There’s not much to say about scraping, priming, and repainting, other than that it’s an ugly job which must get done!

    Turkey on patio rail
    Turkey on patio rail

    If only we could train the turkeys to scrape the rail …

  • The Last Tee

    There’s a good reason this was the last pneumatic tee fitting on the rack:

    Malformed pneumatic fitting
    Malformed pneumatic fitting

    The center fitting should be a male 1/4 inch NPT connection, but it’s completely un-machined. Alas, I no longer have a 1/4 NPT die in my tool chest, so it’s not an easy fix.

    The two female connections are fine, so it must have been one of those rare QC escapes.

    Lowe’s marked it down to $0.47 on clearance and I still couldn’t justify buying the thing.

  • ANENG AN8008 / AN8009 Fuses

    The ANENG AN8008 / AN8009 multimeters have 3.6×10 mm ceramic fuses on their inputs:

    AN8009 10 A current shunt - top view
    AN8009 10 A current shunt – top view

    Based on past experience, at some point over the next year or five, I’ll forget to plug the hot probe back in the voltage hole before measuring a power supply:

    AN8008 multimeter jacks
    AN8008 multimeter jacks

    Whereupon the fuse will blow.

    So, for about five bucks, a bag of 10 A and 0.5 A axial lead fast-blow glass fuses just arrived from halfway around the planet:

    3.6x10 mm axial fuses
    3.6×10 mm axial fuses

    They have the right body size and, in this application, fine points concerning current ratings and cartridge composition don’t make much difference. If I actually need one, I’ll snip off the leads, jam it in the holder, and move on.

  • Xiaomi Dafang Hacks: Hostname for OSD and Filename

    The config/hostname.conf file (found under /system/sdcard/when the camera is running) file defines the camera’s name:

    Cam4

    That file overrides the contents of the usual etc/hostname.conf file, somewhat to my surprise, which remains the default Ingenic-uc1_1.

    The bin/hostname utility returns the hostname:

    [root@Cam4 ~]# which hostname
    /bin/hostname
    [root@Cam4 ~]# hostname
    Cam4

    You can automagically get the hostname in the on-screen display by modifying the OSD formatting variable in config/osd.conf:

    OSD="$(/bin/hostname) %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"

    Which works because the main OSD script sources the config file to set the variable:

    Xiaomi Dafang - 15-04-2019_13.26.18
    Xiaomi Dafang – 15-04-2019_13.26.18

    It’s also helpful (at least for my purposes) to add the hostname to the image filenames. A one-line tweak in the scripts/detectionOn.sh script does the trick:

    snapshot_filename=$(/bin/hostname)_$(date "$snapshot_pattern")

    Which produces names along these lines:

    -rwxr-xr-x  1 ed   root 246K Apr 23  2019 Cam4_2019-04-23_17.51.02.jpg*
    

    Having source code makes simple changes like this … simple!

  • Fiskars Scissors: Preemptive Pivot Tightening

    A new-to-us Fiskars scissors arrived with a loose pivot of a type I’d never seen before:

    Fiskars scissors - pivot nut in place
    Fiskars scissors – pivot nut in place

    The nut fits into the slot in the upper blade, making the nut and screw turn together. Although there’s no torque between the two, the screw had no threadlock and, well, loosening happens.

    The pivot parts include a thin washer between the nut and the lower blade to reduce friction between the moving parts:

    Fiskars scissors - pivot parts
    Fiskars scissors – pivot parts

    With a dot of Loctite on the screw, it’s ready for reassembly:

    Fiskars scissors - pivot ready to assemble
    Fiskars scissors – pivot ready to assemble

    After which, a drop of oil made it sooo smooooth.

    That was easy …

  • Fluorescent Ballast Caps: FAIL

    After converting another fluorescent shoplight into an LED fixture, I tested its capacitors:

    Fluorescent ballast capacitors - one failed
    Fluorescent ballast capacitors – one failed

    The ESR02 reports one as a 4.8 µF capacitor, the other as a “defective part” with a 4 kΩ resistance. Having a cap fail by turning into a resistor is surprising; I’m more surprised it didn’t simply burn up.

    They’re visually indistinguishable, of course.

  • Dragonfly Eye Re-Re-Repair

    After not quite seven years, the acrylic caulk holding our garden dragonfly’s eyeballs in place lost its grip. Some cleaning of marbles and scuffing of copper sockets later, two rings of JB Kwik should do the trick:

    Garden Dragonfly Sculpture - eye repair
    Garden Dragonfly Sculpture – eye repair

    It’s a family tradition, is all I can say …