When you order the enclosure it comes with the following:
- 4x Long Screws
- 4x Short Screws
- 4x Tall Stand offs
- 4x Short Stand offs
- 2x 50x31mm Acrylic cut with mounting holes
I found what worked is to use one acrylic sheet, all eight hex stand offs and the four long screws.
Needed parts |
Start by putting the longer screw through each of the corners and then thread the longer of the hex nuts.
Long screws with long hex nuts |
Now you can put the USB Tester on top and then the shorter hex nuts to tighten it down.
Assembled with USB Tester |
If you have the OLED Backpack you can attach it now.
Assembled with USB Tester and OLED Backpack |
The great thing with the Sick of Beige base is that it adds a bit of weight and when using a DMM, it keeps the leads from going too far into the holes and touching each other. Not to mention touching anything else on your workbench.
SOB with USB Tester and test leads |
SOB with USB Tester and test leads from the top |
I just recieved the entire kit (including acylic base) found & installed the arduino-1.0.5-windows.exe, now I cannot get my Atmel based maXTouch controller to be recognized through your device - it cannot connect. Any idea's? Also the Tx/Rx - could I potentially (that is if I can get communication going through the USB OLED Tester) send/recieve via RS232?
ReplyDeleteI left a reply on your other comment. http://friedcircuits.us/docs/usb-tester-oled-backpack-desc
DeleteHI,
ReplyDeleteI want to see demo how test micro usb cable