

So the key on the Hawker station is basically a thing you insert into the machine so you can change the settings and HAKO for those that don't know is a brand of soldering irons, right? Inexpensive.

On the floor, they broke the last key for their HoCo station. And then today, which is Tuesday, we're actually recording this episode early. Beside and then after, that's just like, changing one thing, like the battery holder got changed to through hole parts and changing out the audio connector because no one the connector got into life. I haven't looked at the Panek schematic in like, four years, no, three years. And so when I started copying it over, I'm like, Oh, I have no idea what's going on in this page. Then I can actually start, you know, copying and pasting the compute module stuff because compute module stuff is actually organ all organized, and looks really nice. So I actually probably pretty good picture with the pretty good picture will be like if I had an A B like this is the pin HEC schematic before I organized it, and this is after there's a big difference. So like, you know, like the USB and like, I need to route the USB or I need to figure out a chip for the communication or something like that. And then we also like to do is put in if it's like a schematic that's in progress, I'll put in like, what is to do in in that box. This is the control circuitry for the solenoids, like separate boxes and put them in boxes and label them. Like this is a pic 32 This is the watchdog timer. Yeah, so I like it have I like to organize it by blocks. So I basically spent three hours on Monday after work organizing the schematic. And I just sprawled it out over the eagle schematic page. And so and you don't know where anything is that because we bait I was like, Okay, I'm gonna do the pic 32. Like I was just like, just plopping crap down and drawing lines. And like back then I didn't really organize my schematics either. And I looked at the schematic and basically the pin hack schematic is like six years of hacks and modifications to the schematic and so it's all over the place. But on Monday, I was doing all this work. And what I've been working on is basically putting the compute modules, sodium socket, putting that on the pin, heck, removing all the parts, we're not using all that stuff. Because basically, everything from the pin hack has to be jumping over onto the compute module board. Greenwire madness, that's green wire madness. And I think a previous podcast, we have a picture of it, like grafted on, it's like a simulating the pin tech board. So it has it this goes along with those Raspberry Pi, three compute module boards that we built. So we're actually calling it the end of the pin hack ecosystem. Okay, so this is this is the pin hack rev eight end of the line.

#MAGNETIC KEY HOLDER CLOUD FULL#
Okay, so one more revision, and then a full rebuild or rebuild redesign redesignįrom scratch. No, no, I'll pin a torus after this revision, the pin heck, It's a never ending quest to build the ultimate pinball platform, I guess. Hello and welcome to the macro fab engineering podcast.

#MAGNETIC KEY HOLDER CLOUD PRO#
