[Techtoolslist] Sunday Project: Fluke 9010A Probe

William Stillwell ki4swy at gmail.com
Tue May 17 13:58:43 EDT 2016


Would of been a great project to use the Perf+ Boards:
https://www.crowdsupply.com/ben-wang/perf-2

William Stillwell

Hamster / KI4SWY

Free Play Florida Arcade & Pinball Show Organizer

On Tue, May 17, 2016 at 1:10 PM, Jess Askey <jess at askey.org> wrote:

> (I sent this on Sunday originally, but I think it didn't come through
> because I sent it from my non-subscribed email address, apologies if you
> got it twice)
>
> Hey Folks... I thought I would share my Sunday project. I did cheat and
> pre-order all my parts for today(minus a couple things I wasn't aware of,
> more details below).
>
> Since the Fluke 9010A probes are hard to come by these days, I figured I
> would make one... I bought the following..
>
> Pictures are here... http://www.askey.org/fluke_probe/
>
>
> -          15' DB9 Male to Male Serial Cable (I can cut this in two and
> make two probes I figure) - $5, free shipping
>
> -          Old WaveTek slim Logic Probe (I had one, but I bought another
> one of these off ebay for $10)
>
> -          Some old RadShack perf boards that I had laying around
>
> -          About 4 hours of time
>
> Then I did the following... (see pics above)
>
>
> 1.       Cut the perf board down to 5 rows wide, drilled the mounting
> holes. Make sure you have a nice row down the middle for the LED's to line
> up properly (centered)
>
> 2.       The break-away seam in the 'double' perf board was unfortunately
> right in the middle of where the LED's had to go. So if you can get solid
> perf board, it would probably work better. I had this laying around.
>
> 3.       Split the Logic Probe, took out the RED and GREEN LED's and the
> tip off the old Logic Probe PCB
>
> 4.       Assembled the circuit using page 142 of the 9010A Service Manual
>
> a.       I had to sub in 1uf caps for the power supply filters (spec was
> .39uf). If you got smaller caps, they would fit better, I had to lie mine
> down.
>
> b.      I didn't have a 205K 1% Metal Film Resistor, I used a 220K 5% CC
> resistor and I will sub after my next mouser order
>
> c.       I also didn't have a 33pf cap, I used a 47pf from a scrap Firefox
> PCB (don't worry, it was in pretty rough shape anyway)
>
> d.      I added 1.2K resistors on the Cathode side of the LED's since
> these were driven by transistors to 'maybe lamps??'... the schematic says
> they are lamps, but I have a hard time believing this. In hindsight, these
> may not be needed at all.
>
> 5.       I used an old clip lead for the ground clip out the back too...
> ironically, both cables seemed to fit pretty nicely out the back of the old
> Logic Probe case
>
> 6.       I fashioned a 'strain relief' by looping the nylon cable backer
> and crimping and epoxying it. I ended up doing it different from the pic as
> my loop had to be on the very back logic probe screw post, so it had to be
> much shorter and the yellow crimp was too big for the space. I just looped
> the nylon and wrapped it tight with a resistor lead, then dipped the whole
> thing in 5-minute epoxy and let it harden. Seems pretty solid.
>
> Seems to work fine... the LED's are definitely dim but usable so I will
> pull those resistors out or lower them appropriately.
>
> Let me know if you have any questions or suggestions... Im going to make
> another one with lessons learned.   :)
>
> PS - I cleaned my bench spotless on Friday night after eating a bunch of
> edible pot (I live in Colorado :) so I can tell you this).... It didn't
> look right.. but... luckily, after this project,  it is now back to looking
> 'normal'...whew!!
>
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