Right, the Xtal tester and cheap arse frequency counter is finished and has finally passed testing. I say finally because it was apparently working fine but the only crystal that I had to test it with, although it being a new one, was dead
Anyway the kit was well thought out apart on area, the tester socket was mounted flat on the PCB, which is fine if you didn't to put it into some form of a case. I purchased it with an acrylic case which means that unless the crystal under test has long leads, then your out of luck. I'll look at ways of bringing this upwards so it finishes pretty flush with the case. The supplied instructions are pretty crap to be honest. Apparently, when used as a frequency counter, the decimal point serves a dual function, firstly as as decimal point and secondly according to other online video I came across, if it steady, it denotes the display is in MHz but if it flashes then it means the display is in kHz, none of this is explained in the instructions.
Anyway here are some photos of the unit in test and finshed in its case (less the future modification with its test socket).
The completed board.
The solder side.
The board has passed the post test, 4th digit showing a zero means it has passed power on test.
Testing with a 2.4MHz duff crystal
Testing with a 54MHz crystal (max is 50MHz) this shows the third overtone (thanks bd139)
Testing a 20MHz crystal
And in its case with the duff crystal
All in, its not a bad piece of TE given the low cost £8.86 plus shipping, while not a precision device it is a very handy thing to have to provide a quick no nonsense test of a crystal.