Those sponges are very interesting. I use a variety of small and big cleaning swaps most of the time can get in to small cavities somtimes combined with the lint free cloths or the Kimtech paper. But those sponges I have never seen. So in the cart the go! Merry Christmas to you Florin!
These cleaning pads are just melamine foam cut to smaller pieces. You can get them in pack of 20 in bigger form and for like 1€ and cut them in smaller pieces.
You said you had problems with jlc soldering those BM1366 ASIC chips so it was on that board or on another design that you made? Also how hot is that buck ?
It was on this board called qaxe, open source design can be found on github. Temp on dc-dc mosfet area is roughly 70 deg. But again the PCB layout is not optimal so that can be improved through better pcb layout.
@voltlog I saw pcb and yea not great. There is also nerdaxe in that repo that is more or less same but uses a esp32 module and another dc dc it is somewhat better but still not optimal , also I wander how signals work since data traces are not properly routed
Yes but that runs at 115200 baud rate, you can run that through a few meters of bad wire and it would still work.. The biggest concerns with this board are thermals and high currents not high speed signaling.
I've used Gledopto controllers to integrate 12V LED strips in to an existing Philips Hue set up for years and they've been flawless. One thing to watch out for if you get an RGBCCT controller is whether you get the 1ID or 2ID version. The 1ID behaves like a regular smart lamp (you can choose a colour temperature of white or a shade of RGB) but the 2ID exposes the RGB and CCT portions as two separate lights. I don't know how this plays with Home Assistant but wanted to flag in case anyone else gets them to integrate in to a Hue system
Those are not bad flashlights, they are light weight and don't have the typical flimsy USB port cover. The UI could be better but it's got a nice big button. And you can get 2 for $7 without the shark logo if you shop around.
Sorry, I haven't been able to prepare a new batch of those. I have no information right now when that's going to be possible. But is certainly on my list.
Bro, I forgot I was watching this, I saw diy miner and off I went in that rabbit hole. I can happily say I have just edited the schematics for 3 hashboards and 9 chips per hashboard and total power of 500W. I just need someone else to verify. Whether it works is a whole different thing.
Knife was super cute😍😍😍😍
Hooray, another mailbag AT LAST! (Grabs credit card).
Those sponges are very interesting. I use a variety of small and big cleaning swaps most of the time can get in to small cavities somtimes combined with the lint free cloths or the Kimtech paper. But those sponges I have never seen. So in the cart the go! Merry Christmas to you Florin!
Thanks for sharing!! Happy holidays!
These cleaning pads are just melamine foam cut to smaller pieces. You can get them in pack of 20 in bigger form and for like 1€ and cut them in smaller pieces.
Oh come on, I'm not gonna cut little pieces of foam myself unless I really need it and can't find it already cut.
You said you had problems with jlc soldering those BM1366 ASIC chips so it was on that board or on another design that you made?
Also how hot is that buck ?
It was on this board called qaxe, open source design can be found on github. Temp on dc-dc mosfet area is roughly 70 deg. But again the PCB layout is not optimal so that can be improved through better pcb layout.
@voltlog I saw pcb and yea not great. There is also nerdaxe in that repo that is more or less same but uses a esp32 module and another dc dc it is somewhat better but still not optimal , also I wander how signals work since data traces are not properly routed
@@sanjikaneki6226 which signals are you referring to as data?
@@voltlog the serial link to the ASICs that UART is not referenced to any gnd plane and crosses plane boundaries like nothing
Yes but that runs at 115200 baud rate, you can run that through a few meters of bad wire and it would still work.. The biggest concerns with this board are thermals and high currents not high speed signaling.
I've used Gledopto controllers to integrate 12V LED strips in to an existing Philips Hue set up for years and they've been flawless.
One thing to watch out for if you get an RGBCCT controller is whether you get the 1ID or 2ID version. The 1ID behaves like a regular smart lamp (you can choose a colour temperature of white or a shade of RGB) but the 2ID exposes the RGB and CCT portions as two separate lights. I don't know how this plays with Home Assistant but wanted to flag in case anyone else gets them to integrate in to a Hue system
Thanks for the feedback!
Those are not bad flashlights, they are light weight and don't have the typical flimsy USB port cover. The UI could be better but it's got a nice big button. And you can get 2 for $7 without the shark logo if you shop around.
Maybe you got better ones? I don't know but the light output is pretty terrible..
Great haul. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching!
Any chance your Tasmota ESP32 Floor Heating Valve Controller will be for sale again at some point in the future?
Sorry, I haven't been able to prepare a new batch of those. I have no information right now when that's going to be possible. But is certainly on my list.
That is nuts!
Pretty nice stuff indeed, dude! 😃
Merry Christmas!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Thanks! You too! 🎄🎄
Bro, I forgot I was watching this, I saw diy miner and off I went in that rabbit hole. I can happily say I have just edited the schematics for 3 hashboards and 9 chips per hashboard and total power of 500W. I just need someone else to verify. Whether it works is a whole different thing.
You too? I was thinking of that buck that was overheating and considering designing something better.
How did you deal with 500w heat?
The quality of the Bits will be the real difference for the screw driver, between the brand name and the random name one 😉
True, but for me at least, at first sight, they look very decent. Certainly better than my previous old screwdriver kit.
@voltlog obviously compared to the previous ones 😉
Mechanic, is just no name stuff with a brand name
You have what you pay for 😹
Indeed!