03-06-2016, 01:27 PM
I'd like one for the knee on my horizontal. Good golly that's a chore. No quill on those, everything lifted by the knee.
My Amazon Prime order finally arrived. Took a couple of weeks, but that's because the driver climbed over the broken trees and branches to leave it on my doorstep.. We've been using the side door and so it sat, and sat.
It's a $35 digital microscope. Bought it mostly on impulse/curiosity, but our eyes are getting old and this thing makes up for it and then some.
"Plugable Digital Microscope". We're looking at jewelry and coins, they say people use them to visually check solder joints. I'm wondering about somehow using it in the shop, maybe an aid to getting my wiggler on spot or something.
Runs from a USB and works Windows, Mac and Linux. Support is great- the software they suggested didn't work (unbeknownst to everyone), so they thought the scope was bad and sent another one in just two days. When it didn't work either, I started investigating and found a linux webcam program called "cheese" that works great.
The scope can be handheld. These pictures are from it's stand, a flexible goosneck affair. The first pic is of a number 17 from the bottom of the dime. 250X
My Amazon Prime order finally arrived. Took a couple of weeks, but that's because the driver climbed over the broken trees and branches to leave it on my doorstep.. We've been using the side door and so it sat, and sat.
It's a $35 digital microscope. Bought it mostly on impulse/curiosity, but our eyes are getting old and this thing makes up for it and then some.
"Plugable Digital Microscope". We're looking at jewelry and coins, they say people use them to visually check solder joints. I'm wondering about somehow using it in the shop, maybe an aid to getting my wiggler on spot or something.
Runs from a USB and works Windows, Mac and Linux. Support is great- the software they suggested didn't work (unbeknownst to everyone), so they thought the scope was bad and sent another one in just two days. When it didn't work either, I started investigating and found a linux webcam program called "cheese" that works great.
The scope can be handheld. These pictures are from it's stand, a flexible goosneck affair. The first pic is of a number 17 from the bottom of the dime. 250X