Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
282
hpr_transcripts/hpr1828.txt
Normal file
282
hpr_transcripts/hpr1828.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,282 @@
|
||||
Episode: 1828
|
||||
Title: HPR1828: Multimeter Mod's Part 1
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1828/hpr1828.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:49:33
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is HPR Episode 1828 entitled Multimeter Mods Part 1.
|
||||
It is hosted by Enable and is about 19 minutes long.
|
||||
The summary is Enable modifies its multimeter to add features to feel lacking.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15.
|
||||
Create a web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Hello, this is Enwai Bill and today I thought I talked everyone about a little hack I have
|
||||
planned for here for a meter that I use.
|
||||
A while back I heard about these Unity meters.
|
||||
This one is a UT61E, so UNI-T-Aula linked that in the show notes.
|
||||
For a hobby multimeter, this is not bad and they're not expensive, let me look it up quickly.
|
||||
So I just looked it up on Amazon.
|
||||
This particular model is $49 currently.
|
||||
Now what this is, it's basically a Chinese knockoff of a very expensive like a fluke
|
||||
or an adulant where you would be up in the $500 range.
|
||||
I'm not kidding.
|
||||
A handheld multimeter push in $500, $600.
|
||||
Here they've come out with them for $50.
|
||||
I don't think I would use this one professionally.
|
||||
Professionally I use a fluke because I know I'm going to be putting my probes on some very
|
||||
high voltage and if something goes wrong, I don't want the thing blowing up in my hand
|
||||
and fluke and some of the bigger names, the adulants, they have blast shielding actually
|
||||
inside the meter.
|
||||
So if something does go wrong, you blow those fuses that are in there.
|
||||
There are interconnected pieces of plastic blast shields within on the inside of the unit.
|
||||
It's hard to explain but it's so that if it, if something does go wrong and something
|
||||
blows out, it doesn't blow out the side of the unit and you're holding it in your hand
|
||||
there and well, you can imagine.
|
||||
These are built kind of cheaply, these unities, however for hobby use, I don't see how you
|
||||
can go wrong.
|
||||
If you're a hobbyist, if you're messing around with, well, like I'm going to get into talking
|
||||
about in a minute, you know, just your components and your capacitors and your resistors and
|
||||
your arduinos and your arpise, this is a great, this is a great meter for $50.
|
||||
It's got every function you're going to need, like voltage, millivoltage, ohms, capacitance,
|
||||
hertz, micro amps, and you know, everything's there.
|
||||
It also comes with this little capacitor diode checking duhiki, I haven't used that yet.
|
||||
It also will data log so you can leave this thing running on something for an hour or two
|
||||
hours a day and come back and download the data to a computer.
|
||||
Now I think, well, I know it said it was for Windows only, I'm sure I could get it going
|
||||
in wine, but I haven't even bothered with any of that.
|
||||
The downfalls to this, personally, well, two little things I didn't care for is it doesn't
|
||||
have a backlight, my fluke, I just turned the backlight, as soon as I turn the thing on,
|
||||
I turn the backlight, it's sometimes even if I'm out in the sun, it's just like a habit
|
||||
for me to hit that button so I always have the backlight going on the fluke, the light
|
||||
will time out after a little while and you might have to press the button again.
|
||||
The thing I really missed on this unity over using my fluke is the timeout.
|
||||
I'm so used to just setting my fluke to voltage, I go, I take my reading and I throw the
|
||||
thing back in my tool bag and I don't know how long the fluke timeout is, but it times
|
||||
out and shuts itself off and you save your battery.
|
||||
My fluke battery will last, geez, if I change it once every three years maybe and I use
|
||||
it almost daily, that's a very handy feature.
|
||||
The first three or four times I use this unity, because I'm used to my fluke, I set it
|
||||
at the voltage, I do whatever I'm doing, I set it aside, I come back the next day and
|
||||
the battery is dead, because when you leave the function dial in a function, it just runs
|
||||
and runs and runs until the battery dies.
|
||||
So I think this is a good opportunity for a little hacking here.
|
||||
What I thought I would do is open this thing up, have a look at the guts inside, see
|
||||
how much room is in there.
|
||||
And I think I could just add a couple LEDs to the LCD screen and light that up and then
|
||||
using a MOSFET and a momentary switch, I can have this, I put a little, I'll put a
|
||||
little switch on the side, I haven't yet, but just a momentary switch kind of like you
|
||||
might see on like, I guess iPods had them or audio players, something you just pull down
|
||||
for a second and then let it snap back up.
|
||||
Now what that's going to do is I can interrupt either the ground or the positive, I suppose
|
||||
it doesn't matter on the nine volt battery.
|
||||
So I'll have the positive for the nine volt battery go up to a momentary switch and then
|
||||
that's going to charge up a capacitor.
|
||||
The capacitor is going to drain through a resistor.
|
||||
So the capacitor is going to hold voltage for quite a while, depending on the capacitor
|
||||
you use and the resistor you use, then the MOSFET picture it like a switch.
|
||||
So I want to switch nine volts to this meter and then I have a power drain situation with
|
||||
the capacitor and the resistor.
|
||||
So what the MOSFET will do is close a switch as long as it's within a voltage range.
|
||||
So the one I'm using I think was a voltage range from 20 volts to I think right under
|
||||
three volts.
|
||||
Anyways, I'm going to be using between nine volts because there's a nine volt battery
|
||||
in there and we'll see where it runs out.
|
||||
I can do some timing.
|
||||
So I'll pick the right resistor and capacitor to have a proper drain.
|
||||
So what that MOSFET is going to do is hit your momentary switch, it charges up the capacitor,
|
||||
the capacitor pulls in the MOSFET, so to speak.
|
||||
And that lets the nine volt current go through two pins of the MOSFET.
|
||||
So then the MOSFET's going to be still watching that capacitor as it drains and it's going
|
||||
to hold those two pins in and send nine volts to the meter and to the LCD, LCD, the LED
|
||||
lights on the LCD, until the voltage drops below, well, we'll say two and a half volts.
|
||||
So I'll link to some pictures in the show notes, I got the unity open, the meter open,
|
||||
it looks like there's plenty of room in there to put switches and the capacitor and the
|
||||
resistor.
|
||||
I open it up further.
|
||||
You can look at the show notes if you want the pictures if you want where I'm flipping
|
||||
it over and checking out how the LCD screen works.
|
||||
LCD screens have like a like a white plastic behind them.
|
||||
And well, this is how your monitor and your notebook works too.
|
||||
There's like a white plastic, sometimes it's like a honeycomb type of feature and then
|
||||
a bulb will shine up through the plastic and depending on the honeycomb structure or
|
||||
the density of the plastic, you'll get an even light.
|
||||
When I looked at it, I saw it had that white piece of plastic back there and it had two
|
||||
little indents.
|
||||
Like you could, like maybe there's an upgraded version of this unity that does have a backlight.
|
||||
But it looks like there was already two little notches in that white plastic for LED bulbs.
|
||||
So I had to find some LEDs in my bag.
|
||||
I had red ones, yellow ones and green ones and I tried them and it none of them looked
|
||||
very cool.
|
||||
I mean, it's a red meter and you put a green LED in there.
|
||||
It's going to look like Christmas and the yellow ones are going to make it look like
|
||||
Easter or something.
|
||||
So I thought what might be cool on this one is a blue LED.
|
||||
I was going to wait and order some blue LEDs for this and then I recalled right after
|
||||
Christmas, I was in a store and they were selling all the Christmas stuff at like a huge
|
||||
discount, all the decorations and that.
|
||||
And on the bottom shelf was LED Christmas tree lights and they were like $2 where, you
|
||||
know, the day before Christmas, they were $20.
|
||||
So I thought, ooh, I'll just buy these for two bucks and I'll have 50 LEDs I can use
|
||||
in future projects.
|
||||
So I recalled that.
|
||||
I went down into the basement, into that Christmas tree box there and see what colors
|
||||
were in there and they had red, green, yellow and blue.
|
||||
So there's my blue LEDs.
|
||||
So I got those and if you look at the show notes, you can see me kind of building up a
|
||||
little LED wiring harness.
|
||||
I had to get the spacing on the LEDs right to fit into those two little notches on the
|
||||
white reflection behind the LCD screen.
|
||||
And I also put shrink wrap over everything because right near where these wires are going
|
||||
to run, there are contacts on the board where the function buttons in the front go down
|
||||
and press.
|
||||
I didn't want any traces or solder from the LED harness to be touching any of these
|
||||
pads mistakenly.
|
||||
So I installed this harness under the LCD in that those two white plastic notches and
|
||||
then the wires and the leads kind of curled around through the the relativity and peak
|
||||
button and then around the blue option button on the unity and then the other side of the
|
||||
leads came down between the hold and the range buttons and then up around the yellow function
|
||||
button.
|
||||
So I don't know if that really helps describe anything.
|
||||
But if you look at a picture of this meter, you can maybe you can kind of tell how I
|
||||
routed the wire and then there was a cutout right there between underneath range and relative
|
||||
that is there was a hole in the PCB for one of the screws that holds the whole case together
|
||||
to come up and go into a screw mount.
|
||||
So my red and my black wire from my LCD harness, this is getting confusing, LED harness went
|
||||
through that hole in the PCB so it went into the back of the case where I can mount a switch
|
||||
in the capacitor and all that.
|
||||
The next thing to work on would be the MOSFET circuitry.
|
||||
So I got my breadboard out and I found a momentary switch.
|
||||
You can see pictures of that as well and I just wired it up.
|
||||
I actually put the unity back together while I was doing that because I wanted to use
|
||||
it to watch the voltage drain on the capacitor and I had a decade resistance box.
|
||||
So I can just dial in resistance and try and get something close to 10 minutes.
|
||||
I had a 470 micro farad electrolytic cap, what voltage is that?
|
||||
So a 16 volt one, I just had it lying around.
|
||||
And then I dialed in the resistance so the drain of the cap to get to the amount of time
|
||||
I wanted, which was around 10 minutes.
|
||||
Turns out with a one mega ohm resistance on this 470 cap, I was getting 10 minutes and
|
||||
40 seconds.
|
||||
So that's close enough for me.
|
||||
I just, I want to pull the meter out, turn it on, do whatever I'm doing, which may
|
||||
take 30 seconds or it may take 3 or 4 or 5 seconds or I just thought 10 minutes was a good
|
||||
window to turn the meter on, use it for whatever you're doing.
|
||||
You might tweak something over here and then you grab the probes again and you test something
|
||||
again.
|
||||
And I figured if you're not done in doing what you need to do in 10 minutes, it's not
|
||||
such a big deal just to turn the thing back on again.
|
||||
Of course this is going to mess with the recording feature.
|
||||
Hmm, I just thought about that right now.
|
||||
I don't ever plan on doing that recording feature where I'll watch some voltage over
|
||||
an hour or a day and then go back and look at it.
|
||||
I don't plan on doing that.
|
||||
I suppose if I ever found I wanted to, I could just change the switch from off momentary
|
||||
and then like, or maybe it would be on as up and then off as in the middle and then down
|
||||
as momentary.
|
||||
Maybe I'll look for one of those.
|
||||
Then I'll have the option to just pull the little switch down to momentary and it
|
||||
pulls in the MOSFET, it sends power to the meter and the LEDs, it runs for 10 minutes,
|
||||
it shuts off.
|
||||
Have the thing running for a day, I'll push it up into the on position.
|
||||
Now I think I might actually go and find, see if there's a on off momentary, small little
|
||||
thing that I can mount.
|
||||
There's plenty of room behind the LCD in like the back of the case that the, you know,
|
||||
the case splits in half, that whole back area back there, there's like nothing back
|
||||
there.
|
||||
I think they just continue the form factor up just to, you know, make it look impressive,
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
Okay, I'm going to pause here because I just finished, I got the LEDs in underneath
|
||||
the LCD and I have the MOSFET circuit running at 10 minutes, 40 seconds on my breadboard.
|
||||
So I'm just going to have to find a switch I want to use and then solder up this resistor,
|
||||
this capacitor and this MOSFET in like a little tiny package and I'll probably just shrink
|
||||
wrap the whole thing and just have a couple of leads coming out.
|
||||
And then I'll put it in the meter.
|
||||
So you won't know I'm pausing, you won't notice any time lapse right here, but at least
|
||||
the day is going to go by while I go to somewhere to look for this switch.
|
||||
So I guess this is intermission, I should place some music.
|
||||
Okay, I'm back, that little blip in the audio there was about 24 hours gone by.
|
||||
I continued to play around with this circuit a little more and I also went online looking
|
||||
for that switch that I wanted to find.
|
||||
I couldn't find an on off momentary switch, well I did find them but they were large switches
|
||||
they seemed to be for automotive applications.
|
||||
What I want is a little tiny sub micro, just I'm sure you can imagine what I'm looking
|
||||
for, just a little tiny slider switch.
|
||||
I wasn't finding one in on off momentary but then like at the last minute on Mauser,
|
||||
I found a little sub micro slider switch that was on on momentary.
|
||||
So this will work fine for me also.
|
||||
I'll have it set up so if I click to switch up, the meter is on and it will stay on.
|
||||
If I move that switch to the middle position, I just won't use those terminals for that
|
||||
second on feature.
|
||||
So that'll be just like an off.
|
||||
And then pulling down will be momentary, charge up the capacitor, have the MOSFET do its
|
||||
thing and when you release it's momentary, it goes back into that middle position which
|
||||
is effectively going to be off.
|
||||
So that was one order, I got that from Mauser and that's going to take, you know, five
|
||||
to, you know, could be two weeks.
|
||||
Then I'm up after ordering that and I'm playing around with the breadboard and I took the
|
||||
LED out that I was using for testing and timing with the MOSFET and I had it with some alligator
|
||||
clips up to the meter to just check that it would run the meter and it did not.
|
||||
So what was happening there is the meter is trying to draw current through this MOSFET,
|
||||
those two legs of the MOSFET and it's taking the voltage down from nine volts and bringing
|
||||
it down into like the low eighths which is not enough to power up this meter.
|
||||
It's going to need more current than that.
|
||||
So I'm going to need another component.
|
||||
On Amazon, I found a 10 pack of little really tiny relays, nine volt relays.
|
||||
So I ordered that 10 pack and, you know, if it's prime, it's free shipping, it'll be
|
||||
here in a couple of days.
|
||||
I don't know, it was like three or four bucks.
|
||||
So then I'm thinking, well, this is going to be two weeks, I don't want to wait two weeks
|
||||
with this meter half open and these wires hanging out.
|
||||
So I thought maybe I'll make this into two mods on this meter and I can make it also
|
||||
two episodes for HPR.
|
||||
In a couple weeks, I'll record a second one and it will be about the mod for putting
|
||||
the timing circuit in this.
|
||||
So now I took out a meter, I started poking around in this unity while it's running to see
|
||||
if there's anywhere I could pick up nine volts.
|
||||
And up near the dial, there's a series of four small capacitors.
|
||||
And at the first capacitor, there was nine volts there.
|
||||
Now I don't have a schematic for this.
|
||||
I mean, I don't know if there's one around, but if I had to guess, I bet those four capacitors
|
||||
are where the nine volts comes in from the battery.
|
||||
And whenever the dial goes into any position, it sends the nine volts into these four capacitors
|
||||
for power conditioning.
|
||||
And then after the capacitor, there's a nice smooth current.
|
||||
It gets sent down to 3.3 and you got a nice steady current to run the whole system.
|
||||
So what I did was on my LED harness, I cut the black wire and I have that over, soldered
|
||||
to the negative of the battery terminal.
|
||||
And then I took a 3.3.3 resistor on the red wire, soldered that on, put some heat shrink.
|
||||
So nothing's going to touch.
|
||||
Cut the lead of the other end of the resistor quite close and stuck it on right at that first
|
||||
capacitor where I was getting nine volts and soldered that up.
|
||||
That allows this meter.
|
||||
Any time the meter is on now, I got my blue back, black.
|
||||
Any time this meter is on now, it has the blue back light.
|
||||
So I like that.
|
||||
So the only thing I might do is put some hot glue on this because the way that that resistor
|
||||
is connected to the terminal, it's not going through a through hole and it has nothing
|
||||
retaining this wire.
|
||||
So this is going to be like handheld thrown down on tables, jumbling around in bags and
|
||||
things.
|
||||
That might not be a very good connection for the long haul.
|
||||
So I'm going to hot glue, put some hot glue around near that connection just so it retains
|
||||
the wire and doesn't have any stress on that connection.
|
||||
Okay, so I'll call that, I'll call this episode one and I will record episode two when those
|
||||
other parts get here.
|
||||
So if anybody wants to leave comments in the comment section or if anybody wants to email
|
||||
with questions or comments or whatever, I am NY bill at gunmonkinet.net and I'm still
|
||||
on status net, starting to work towards going, getting a GNU social instance because I feel
|
||||
like there's no more updates coming for status net.
|
||||
I'm working on that but for now, I'm still on status net, it's sn dot gunmonkinet dot
|
||||
net.
|
||||
Okay, until those parts come in now, talk to you guys later.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at hackerpublicradio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
|
||||
how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hackerpublic Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
|
||||
the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
On this otherwise status, today's show is released on the creative comments, attribution,
|
||||
share a like, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user