This is probably the best home lab and set-up I've ever seen! I'm very jealous, especially for those sliding wire organizers and the benches. I can imagine a lot of RUclipsrs would love to have a stream deck like yours. All is done very professionally and looks so organized and neat. Congratulations! You've done amazing job!
Great lab you have built a wonderful space, work tables, good lighting and a great bench test gear too. You have done a lot of great stuff in that basement, thanks for sharing.
Nice workplace, congratulations! As you're also a bit engaged in precision volt-nuttery, I'm interested how and where the whole room is built, and how you keep its temperature stable. What happened to your FLUKE 3330B calibrator?
Thank you, it's an honor to receive a comment from you! I'm trying not to be a volt-nut, but I've given in a bit to that. There really isn't much special about the room... it's 1850 sqft (172 m2) with a 9 foot ceiling, that's wide open with some big shelving units breaking up the space a little. I don't know how stable the temperature is, typically 22 - 24C this summer, but that's something I can log. It's a fully underground concrete basement, with one window-well about 50 feet from the workbench. I'll see about logging the temperature at the bench over time, the DAQ6510 should handle that nicely.
Oh, and the calibrator... I still have it. I need to decide where it's going to sit. At 65 lbs and its size, it will need a proper spot to sit and I only want to move it once!
This is probably the best home lab and set-up I've ever seen! I'm very jealous, especially for those sliding wire organizers and the benches. I can imagine a lot of RUclipsrs would love to have a stream deck like yours. All is done very professionally and looks so organized and neat. Congratulations! You've done amazing job!
Welcome back! Nice new setup - great use of the desk space! Those pull out wire racks are awesome!
Great lab you have built a wonderful space, work tables, good lighting and a great bench test gear too. You have done a lot of great stuff in that basement, thanks for sharing.
That's a cool Lab now it's time for me to step my game up with Keithley 2460,2281s1,6510.B & K 891,9801,5335B
Is there room on that bench for an analog scope?
Maybe, but why? No, really... why? See videos from Dave on eeVblog and others about that.
Nice workplace, congratulations!
As you're also a bit engaged in precision volt-nuttery, I'm interested how and where the whole room is built, and how you keep its temperature stable.
What happened to your FLUKE 3330B calibrator?
Thank you, it's an honor to receive a comment from you!
I'm trying not to be a volt-nut, but I've given in a bit to that. There really isn't much special about the room... it's 1850 sqft (172 m2) with a 9 foot ceiling, that's wide open with some big shelving units breaking up the space a little. I don't know how stable the temperature is, typically 22 - 24C this summer, but that's something I can log. It's a fully underground concrete basement, with one window-well about 50 feet from the workbench.
I'll see about logging the temperature at the bench over time, the DAQ6510 should handle that nicely.
Oh, and the calibrator... I still have it. I need to decide where it's going to sit. At 65 lbs and its size, it will need a proper spot to sit and I only want to move it once!
what do you do for a living?
I was just asking myself that question today...
I am in software development
Corgitronics maybe, with that ton of high end gear you'll join the repair society? as part of your hobby?
Can i ask how mach did this stuffs cost you?
If you want to know how much, we cannot afford a place like this...lol