Heads up, in the UK at least it is a bank holiday weekend - so fleabay has max sellers fee of £1 until the end of the month.
So competing for my time is:
- getting effing Win10 installed
- finding out about swift nesting boxes that I could fit under the eaves (work is restarting on the outside of my house, so the scaffolding won't be up forever, I hope)
- cutting grass, brambles, etc
- repairing my newsfox rss reader, which has just blown up
- swapping a battery holder for my Tek 1502, ready for fleabaying
- getting a description of my 2465dms for fleabay, and working out shipping costs
- inevitable family crap
- daring to poke around in a faulty 1kV PSU; no schematics, no indication of how to connect it to external equipment (other than the way it is currently connected)
Just as well I'm part of the idle retired.
Well, that's "1" sorted, thanks to bd, ignoring all the crap on all the guides on the net, and using NTFS on the usb stick. "1" now mutates into "installing usable operating systems alongside Win10". I wonder how long Win10 will operate; it thinks I don't have an internet connection
Sorting "4" was delightfully easy. Locate a likely looking directory in a backup, and cp -r that to the normal place. Now how easy wouldn't that be in Windows? Which bits of That Big Mistake (the registry) have to be twiddled, and how do you resurrect it if you screw up?
Can't put off measuring the house eaves for "2" much longer I'll have a my third cup of coffee first, then I'll have to go to the post office to get milk and maybe other things the local supermarket doesn't have anymore (e.g. eggs!).
Still managing to avoid "2", this time by completing "5".
But that's given me an almost uncontrollable urge to dissect two 8-cell NiCd batteries, and spark them together into a 9-cell NiCd, so that I can complete the rebuilding of my Tek 1502's battery cage. I feel a trip to my local hackspace is in the offing, to use their spot welder.
Done. "5" that is. I started "2", but found my camera battery was flat, and that was a sufficient excuse to put it off.
Remaking the battery pack was surprisingly fun and satisfying. New tagged[1] NiCds are expensive, around £30 a set, so I bodged my personal Tek 1502 with NiMH cells. But then a few months ago I bought ten 8-cell NiCd batteries for about £15. They were made in 2014 and "expired" in Nov-19. Still better than the original NiCds or NiMHs
Remaking involved twisting the tags off, and re-attaching new ones so the cells are further apart and will fit in that 1502 battery holder. That wouldn't have been possible except that there is now a battery welder available to me, and it is quite fun to use.
Regrettably I can't use 18 of the cells in my bomb-proof £0.99
Fluke 8125A nixie meter, since they are too large. Fortunately that fires up without them, unlike the 1502.
[1] tagged so they can be connected with wires in the strange battery holder. The "strange" is superfluous: everything about the 1503 battery charger cum PSU is strange. Start with a PUJT, and see if you can understand how it works