I have probably had about 4 hours of sleep in the last 35+
This is the best time for you to write a poem.
No, he's had too much sleep.
I have probably had about 4 hours of sleep in the last 35+
This is the best time for you to write a poem.
No, he's had too much sleep.
The only two things I can offer:
1: You need more solder. Don't be afraid of it. You want to make nice "cartoon volcano" mounds of solder with concave walls. Especially here where the connector is going to have stuff hanging off of it. Don't use so much solder that you start to bulge and get convex mounds. It's an art, don't be upset if you can't get it right the first time. A little too much solder is better than not enough.
2: Get some acid brushes and cut the bristles in half to make them stiffer. Use those with some iso alcohol to brush the connector and get the flux off. Ideally, you want a clean joint - flux can be deadly to high-speed data. If you have blobs of flux, get some orange sticks (sticks made of soft wood like orange tree wood - those wooden sticks they use in nail salons to push your cuticles in are a good sub) and use those to break the flux off. Don't use metal scrapers here.
Good tips, thanks!
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You're probably sleeping now so you won't see this for awhile. But it looks good to me! My eyes are getting old. I got a big clamp on table magnifier for doing any detail work now.
What's going on with the gasket?
Getting my printer to feed the flexible material is being a problem. Its not properly feeding and seems like its just getting wrapped around the gears that pull in the filament.
I'm sure you have already dried it. How old is it? I am guilty of never doing maintenance on my printer. A good clean and lube of the machine itself may be helpful.
Everything is in "good" shape and the filament is brand new. I have never printed with the flexible stuff before. I may run some of the stuff I have to clean out the nozzle to see if that does the trick.
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