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#1 |
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Device: No K1, PW2, KV, KOA
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Paint and Play Serial Port
The target audience are those who will be connecting a serial port to their Kindle motherboard perhaps once in a life-time.
In this thread, I try to use common, low cost, materials. Things which might even be useful for their intended purpose.
Alright - the bottom line - did we make a painted-on, resistor? Yes - this one measures 790 ohms. Keep in mind the electrical/electronic use of our DIY conductive paint: The test strip is much, much, longer than what we need to connect the wires to the serial port connection solder dots. So in our use, the connections will be much less than that 800 ohms. In our use, the hairpin loop of the wires will be positioned so that the solder dot is on the inside of the loop, right up at the curve. So our DIY conductive paint length will be hardly longer that the thickness of the wire (0.010 inch, 0.255 mm). PLUS: These are CMOS ports - they would work just fine even with 10,000 ohms in series with them (in fact, the motherboard has series resistors already in the connection trace for noise reduction). YUP - It works. Now go free up some locks with the left over graphite, touch up something with the paint, and maybe even repair something with the left-over Epoxy. All low cost items, all of the left-overs can be used for something. Last edited by knc1; 09-02-2015 at 09:11 PM. |
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#2 |
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KT-2 Serial Port reference materials, see:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...20&postcount=3 Last edited by knc1; 09-03-2015 at 11:39 AM. |
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#3 |
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Next, in the above (second post) -
I see if I can ruin my brand-new KT2 by following my own directions. Coming to this thread RSN. |
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#4 |
Enthusiast
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So in the final analysis, is it more or less work to make this paint and test it than it is to practice microsoldering enough to be competent?
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#5 | |
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Quote:
By a few years and no special (expensive) tools. Plus - Get a glob of hot solder in the wrong place might be an error that you can never recover from - With this, make a mistake, wipe it off with something (q-tip?) wet. You can't do wet clean-up and correct with hot solder. ![]() |
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#6 |
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I like the home made conductive paint, but some might rather try conductive paint in a pen? http://www.ebay.com/bhp/conductive-pen
Could you also use the paint to fix rear window defoggers from an auto parts store? http://www.ebay.com/itm/Loctite-2135...cb66d0&vxp=mtr |
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#7 | |
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Quote:
But they miss my target audience on two points: * Price * Lots of left-over that can't be used for anything other than making conductive traces. The left-overs from my suggestion can all be used for their original, intended purposes. ![]() |
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#8 |
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Ignoring my price and re-usablity points - -
This one looks like fun: Words and pictures: http://spectrum.ieee.org/geek-life/h...conductive-ink One (USA) on-line source for the metals: http://www.mcssl.com/store/gallium-source/gallium-metal http://www.mcssl.com/store/gallium-s...--indium-metal (It looks like a minimum amount is around $50) Mid-page, a chart of various tri-metal combinations: http://sci-toys.com/scitoys/scitoys/...uid_metal.html So if someone has the $50 .. $100 to spend, and tell us if the ink beads up or flows on top of the Kindle's solder mask ... The required video: Last edited by knc1; 09-24-2015 at 08:25 AM. |
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