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#1
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smart tweezers
I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin.
Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. |
#2
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smart tweezers
flipper Inscribed thus:
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I'm convinced they reach relativistic spin velocities and vanish into a miniature wormhole. Some do eventually emerge from the other end, though, after time dilation into the future. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. I've a dinning room carpet a bit like that... Peas and peanuts just vanish, not to be found until they rattle up the vacuum cleaner hose sometime in the future. -- Best Regards: Baron. |
#3
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smart tweezers
"Oppie" wrote in message ... I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. My Peak LCR meter has a tweezer attachment - also good for launching SMDs at faster than the eye can see velocities. |
#4
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smart tweezers
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:35:02 -0600, flipper wrote:
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. Which is why you should always grab a few extra. I'm convinced they reach relativistic spin velocities and vanish into a miniature wormhole. Some do eventually emerge from the other end, though, after time dilation into the future. Try dropping an 0603 resistor a bunch of times. 85% of the time it will land wrongside up. John |
#5
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smart tweezers
"Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote: Oppie wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. I think you have to adjust the nut on the end of the handle to eliminate this problem. Which nut? ;-) -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#6
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smart tweezers
Michael A. Terrell wrote:
"Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote: Oppie wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. I think you have to adjust the nut on the end of the handle to eliminate this problem. Which nut? ;-) Tsssk... The one holding it??? naaa.. |
#7
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smart tweezers
Sjouke Burry wrote: Michael A. Terrell wrote: "Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote: Oppie wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. I think you have to adjust the nut on the end of the handle to eliminate this problem. Which nut? ;-) Tsssk... The one holding it??? naaa.. We need to be sure, though. -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#8
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smart tweezers
Sjouke Burry wrote:
Michael A. Terrell wrote: "Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote: Oppie wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. I think you have to adjust the nut on the end of the handle to eliminate this problem. Which nut? ;-) Tsssk... The one holding it??? naaa.. Kinda like that part that causes most car crashes - the loose nut behind the wheel? ;-) Cheers! Rich |
#9
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smart tweezers
flipper wrote:
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 14:20:20 -0800, John Larkin Which is why you should always grab a few extra. That, of course, guarantees at least two trips to the parts bin with quantities failing to sum upon return. You've simply increased the work minimum, missing quantity distribution, and information entropy as to where the loss will occur, causing an expansion of the futile search area from the immediate work space to the entire path back to the bin, exponentially compounded by 'stuck on shoe' and related phenomena carrying the part to uncorrelated hinterlands. Dude, is that medicinal or home-grown? %-} Cheers! Rich |
#10
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smart tweezers
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 21:35:12 -0600, flipper wrote:
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 14:20:20 -0800, John Larkin wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:35:02 -0600, flipper wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. Which is why you should always grab a few extra. That, of course, guarantees at least two trips to the parts bin with quantities failing to sum upon return. You've simply increased the work minimum, missing quantity distribution, and information entropy as to where the loss will occur, causing an expansion of the futile search area from the immediate work space to the entire path back to the bin, exponentially compounded by 'stuck on shoe' and related phenomena carrying the part to uncorrelated hinterlands. Which is why people buy reels. John |
#11
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smart tweezers
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie"
wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW |
#12
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smart tweezers
John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#13
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smart tweezers
"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. |
#14
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smart tweezers
Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. Or just learn to do things right in the first place. Plastic bags and boiling ketles don't cut it in business. -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#15
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smart tweezers
Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. Or just learn to do things right in the first place. Plastic bags and boiling ketles don't cut it in business. -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#16
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smart tweezers
For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked
off scientist!!! Pinky and the Brain. |
#17
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smart tweezers
For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked
off scientist!!! Pinky and the Brain. |
#18
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smart tweezers
Ian Field wrote: For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! Pinky and the Brain. No Pinky here! -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#19
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smart tweezers
Ian Field wrote: For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! Pinky and the Brain. No Pinky here! -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#20
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smart tweezers
"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message
m... No Pinky here! Sorry for your loss |
#21
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smart tweezers
"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message
m... No Pinky here! Sorry for your loss |
#22
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smart tweezers
"Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote in message ... Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. And be sure to chant: Eye of newt, toe of frog, wool of bat, and natural log. That's for a pan of stew. |
#23
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smart tweezers
"Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote in message ... Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, "Oppie" wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. And be sure to chant: Eye of newt, toe of frog, wool of bat, and natural log. That's for a pan of stew. |
#24
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smart tweezers
Oppie wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message m... No Pinky here! Sorry for your loss Yours too. ;-) -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist! I m just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
#25
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smart tweezers
On 11/17/2010 11:51 AM, Oppie wrote:
I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Micromark sells tweezers that hold odd shaped parts, dunno if you couldn't modify some to suit your needs. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#26
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smart tweezers
On 11/18/2010 4:27 AM, Rich Grise wrote:
Sjouke Burry wrote: Michael A. Terrell wrote: "Paul Hovnanian P.E." wrote: Oppie wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. I think you have to adjust the nut on the end of the handle to eliminate this problem. Which nut? ;-) Tsssk... The one holding it??? naaa.. Kinda like that part that causes most car crashes - the loose nut behind the wheel? ;-) Cheers! Rich In aircraft its a short between the headphones. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#27
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smart tweezers
On 11/19/2010 11:00 AM, flipper wrote:
On Thu, 18 Nov 2010 02:29:59 -0800, Rich Grise wrote: flipper wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 14:20:20 -0800, John Larkin Which is why you should always grab a few extra. That, of course, guarantees at least two trips to the parts bin with quantities failing to sum upon return. You've simply increased the work minimum, missing quantity distribution, and information entropy as to where the loss will occur, causing an expansion of the futile search area from the immediate work space to the entire path back to the bin, exponentially compounded by 'stuck on shoe' and related phenomena carrying the part to uncorrelated hinterlands. Dude, is that medicinal or home-grown? %-} Cheers! Rich Murphy's been know to drive people to drink and drugs but I just... well, I call it colorful language. Often LOUD, too. Also known as applying the cuss wrench. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#28
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smart tweezers
On 11/18/2010 8:10 PM, Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote:
Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. wrote in message ... John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, wrote: I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. John Ferrell W8CCW No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. And be sure to chant: Eye of newt, toe of frog, wool of bat, and natural log. (the engineer's spell, of course) Stirred gently with a wood slide rule? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#29
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smart tweezers
Dan wrote:
On 11/18/2010 8:10 PM, Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote: Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. wrote in message John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. And be sure to chant: Eye of newt, toe of frog, wool of bat, and natural log. (the engineer's spell, of course) Stirred gently with a wood slide rule? Did you hear about the constipated economist? He worked it out with a pencil. Cheers! Rich |
#30
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smart tweezers
Rich Grise wrote: Dan wrote: On 11/18/2010 8:10 PM, Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote: Ian Field wrote: "Michael A. wrote in message John Ferrell wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:51:39 -0500, I was using the smart tweezers to verify a tiny SMT cap in my junk bin. Guess I was holding it too tight and the cap slipped, became airborne and was never found. I wonder if the new breed of the smart tweezers has a lighter touch? Nice tool though for the most part. Work inside a plastic bag. I use gallon size ziplocks. No good for static sensitive parts. Boil a kettle. And be sure to chant: Eye of newt, toe of frog, wool of bat, and natural log. (the engineer's spell, of course) Stirred gently with a wood slide rule? Did you hear about the constipated economist? He worked it out with a pencil. Did you hear about the constipated Libertarian? He died from it. -- For the last time: I am not a mad scientist, I'm just a very ticked off scientist!!! |
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