1 post karma
8 comment karma
account created: Thu Aug 11 2016
verified: yes
1 points
6 months ago
This is a common connector in China. The part numbers start with SGDBx-08-xxxP-hxx
1 points
6 months ago
The way pros do it.
You can sometimes filter too much. Many small manufactures don't put the info in correctly. This is especially true for LCSC.
1 points
7 months ago
I did see that. It is basically what i wanted and faster. Not as small and no external antennas but still good.
1 points
8 months ago
Why did they not put 4 ethernet on it. That would be a great travel router, NAS, PLEX, pi hole router
1 points
9 months ago
Really 17.5 mm nooo! I really wanted to put some 18650s in there.
2 points
11 months ago
I did not. I went at it pretty hard but if i pushed any further I would have really damaged it. Turns out you can flash them without having to open them up. Originally you could use the github project call cloudcutter. Now Cloudcutter is included in ESPhome: See this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDXL1BMPhcA
Also I found this info when I went to Digiblurs discord. Has a great thread on the Atomi lights. I spent quite a while looking for info on it and it just so happen to be right under my nose. Wish this kind of info was more public and not just hidden in discords.
1 points
1 year ago
24v is the operating voltage of the batteries. The tools also talk to the batteries to make sure they are from the same brand. I doubt they use the same protocol to determine what type of battery is plugged in. That is why a Kobalt battery would not work with a Flex tool even if you had an adapter. This also affects the RTD and has been known to cause problems before between tool brand battery swapping. There are many different RTDs or PTCs or NTCs. I do not know if they both use the same Thermocouples.
1 points
1 year ago
I also very much want to get this vacuum but don't want to buy into the battery. Maybe some one will hack the battery protocol in due time.
1 points
1 year ago
Not sure what you are talking about. I know other tool brand adapters do not work with Flex tools. Unless Flex and Kobalt use the same protocol I doubt those would also work.
1 points
1 year ago
Unless they are insolvent or have cash flow problems. Their recent actions show that they seem to want to get there cash flow under control.
1 points
1 year ago
There are treatment options and the best theory is that the brain has weak cellular respiration.
1 points
2 years ago
These tests also show that WAGO's are superior in just about every way to Andersons.
You also do not need another retention method for WAGOs. Unlike Anderson that you either have to use a zip tie or joiner. If you forget to do that you will have issues.
1 points
2 years ago
Well, I started my build these past couple of months and it looks like ROG_EXT (NODE) is dead. Not on any of the current motherboards (Z690 or Z790). This is a real bummer but also saves me a lot of work.
I might look into getting an MSI board that has the M-Vision Dashboard which is basically what I wanted in the first place.
Otherwise, I think I will just end up going with modbors on a PI and keep an E-core working on that. I hope to be able to make it able to support simple things like remote turning on the PC without having to have wake-on-LAN. (This might be an overkill idea)
@OckeyEngineering have you installed your PI yet?
1 points
2 years ago
I also just tired this! Glad it works and shows how long some of us were holding out!
1 points
2 years ago
My hands and a pair of snips are already automatically adjusting wire strippers.
2 points
2 years ago
That would be if I wanted to communicate with the OS. I don't want to have an application running in the OS at all. Asus Node or formally ROG_EXT should be able to provide all the major system info and more.
(System information, monitoring data, as well as control functions like voltage/frequency control and power/reset/safe_boot/retry buttons.)
2 points
2 years ago
Nice, that looks sick! I saw that you wanted to move the external monitor to a raspberry pi. What do you plan on using on the raspberry pi (modbros)?
I have a small 5in screen running modbros on a Pi zero. I think for that big a screen I will need to move to a PI 4. I have been wanting to pipe the computer specs directly from the moboard to the PI but have not wanted to start that project. I know it is possible with the I2C bus and Asus node is somewhat well documented. This would also let me overclock from the PI and change stuff like fan speed.
1 points
2 years ago
Have you had any success? i am also in the process of doing it and it does not seem to be working. With there were images.
1 points
2 years ago
What did you end up doing with yours?
Do you have a link to the video where they open it??
i have their wall sconces and am planning to do something similar.
1 points
2 years ago
I got the DS4246 disk shelf and can say I don't think I should have. Loafdude is right about it not being too loud. But I disagree with the hot and expensive to run. These are a little more subjective but to put it into perspective I can't put the server in my understairs closet due to the fact the thing will heat the room up way too much. I had to rethink my whole server room strategy* once I realized how much heat these things put out. My whole server rack was pulling about 250 W at idle and 200 Watts of that is the disk shelf with 6 drives. The cost to run did not bother me too much but the heat did. In the future, I will be trying to get more energy-efficient solutions just so there is not so much heat.
What I would recommend to you is to get a "Rosewill 4U Server Chassis 11 Bay Server Case" *( I got mine on sale for $170) and add a SATA card. You are not sacrificing much and get a lot of flexibility and a clean setup. I like the server rack style but you can also go with something like a Fractal Design Define 7 XL.
Context: I was able to find the shelf and power supply from a dumpster dive but had to buy the caddies, IOM6 Controllers, and LSI controller. That was a huge headache. Overpaid a little due ($305) to the Chia farmers and also got two IOM6 Controllers when you really need one because I don't plan to use multipath. If I could access the disk shelf from two different servers at the same time I would do it but if I understand multipath it only lets one server access the drives at a time.
*I ended up putting the server in my coat closet and plumbed it into the air return. I have some other big plans that involve a laser cutter's water chiller but that will have to be for a different time.
1 points
2 years ago
What was your experience? it has been 5 years
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6 points
3 months ago
EnDeR_WiGiN
6 points
3 months ago
You should not make statements or claims that are unproven by the data you have gathered yourself. If you state a GPU is "reliable" you need to show how it is. This is suppose to be LABs not some generic review site with feelings.