Be sure your stereo-zoom has a cover thing screwed into the front
of it.
always good to protect the active optics.
We have a rework station with a sliding X Y table on it.... and a scope
mounted on it... but... my hands are not steady as when young..( need to
find technology to assist with that!)
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (
http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 1/14/2017 9:20:05 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
cclist at
sydex.com writes:
On 01/14/2017 12:48 AM, Rob Jarratt wrote:
Has anyone had experience of using an item like this
for soldering
and PCB inspection work?
I use a B&L stereo zoom microscope for inspection, but have never used
it for soldering. That is, after soldering in, say, a TQFP, I'll use it
to examine for misregistration and solder bridges. But I can't imagine
soldering under it.
For that, where normal vision doesn't suffice, I use a head-mounted
binocular loupe. Seems to work just fine.
--Chuck