microscope

Hi there,

I spent a lot of money for magnifying glass and microscope (Dino) for soldering purposes. But none was useful. I am looking for a microscope through which you can actually see while soldering or depositing solder pastes on pads. Can someone suggest a good microscope? Thanks

Regards

Bausch & Lomb / Leitz StereoZoom 4 or StereoZoom 5.

Often obtainable on eBay. Most of the time you will use it on minimum zoom, but you soud also try to get the 0.5X auxiliary lens - it will give you wider field of view and gets the objective further away from the work.

The Geek

I use a cheap 20x stereo dissection microscope:

http://www.lakeland-microscopes.co.uk/stereo.html

The optical and mechanical quality are surprisingly good for the price.

Leon

I have an olympus 1-20X zoom which is really nice. The zoom feature allows you a lot more flexibility than a fixed one. bought used at an auction.

I myself have the following type of digital microscope. It is very good but its body needs to be very close to PCB. It is very good for inspection and documentation. But not actually soldering. I was thinking of using its stand and watch the process of soldering/pasting on my computer but it does not work like that. It needs to be very close to the board so you can not put anything else (soldering pen or paste dispenser) between the microscope and the PCB.

http://www.bigc.com/products_handheld.php

You definitely need a proper microscope. The one I use has about 10 cm clearance below the objective lens.

Leon

leon_heller:
You definitely need a proper microscope. The one I use has about 10 cm clearance below the objective lens.

Leon

Leon and others!

Thanks for your responses. However, I am still puzzled as to what type of microscope should I buy? What sort of specs should I be looking for?

I intend to use this microscope main for

depositing solder paste using a dispenser. I want to be able to use my hands in placing paste on pads while at the same time looking at the whole process through the microscope. Similarly, for placing components.

But I have not found a good microscope with good clearance between the lense and PCB.

Also, it should be something that does not cost an arm and leg. Thanks

Regards

Philba:
I have an olympus 1-20X zoom which is really nice. The zoom feature allows you a lot more flexibility than a fixed one. bought used at an auction.

Olympus, Nikon, B&L, Leitz/Leica, are are good. But make sure you get a sturdy stand which allows you to get things under the scope! At home I have one like eBay item # 230255434551 and we use them at work for everything from inspection to SMT assembly by hand, assembling microwave assemblies and just about anything else. But beware, the base weight around 22kg so it will be expensive to ship! Bu then it won't move on the bench either.

No offence Leon, but the little cheap dissecting scopes don’t seem to have the optics, the reach, or the illumination options to make them worthwhile. A good used REAL zoom scope can often be cheaper and much more useful.

The Geek

Are you sure you want a microscope and not a magnifying visor? I’m using a $6 [magnifying visor from Harbor Freight for all of my surface mount soldering work and I don’t think I’d trade it for a microscope at any price. If I need to shift things around I can without having to worry about keeping it under a stationary lens. I can pick a board up and look on either side or from any angle. I have no problems seeing well enough to solder SMT parts. It only does up to about 5x, but I’m finding that’s enough for me. I’ve also got a 10x jeweler’s loupe that I can use for closer inspection, but I never find myself needing it.

Before you spend a lot of money on a scope, it might be worth giving a visor a try.

Keith](http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=38896)

khearn:
Are you sure you want a microscope and not a magnifying visor? I’m using a $6 [magnifying visor from Harbor Freight for all of my surface mount soldering work and I don’t think I’d trade it for a microscope at any price. If I need to shift things around I can without having to worry about keeping it under a stationary lens. I can pick a board up and look on either side or from any angle. I have no problems seeing well enough to solder SMT parts. It only does up to about 5x, but I’m finding that’s enough for me. I’ve also got a 10x jeweler’s loupe that I can use for closer inspection, but I never find myself needing it.

Before you spend a lot of money on a scope, it might be worth giving a visor a try.

Keith[/quote]

Thanks for the info. You just reminded me that I had one like this. Actually I have not used it. It just fell apart on me. But I have bought several different mangnifying glasses. Non of them worked. I even spend $130 on a magnifying glass from Howard electronics. The lens turned out defective and they never replaced it.

Any ways, I work with very very small pitched ICs. My eyes just does not seem to take it anymore. I need something good between my eyes and the PCB so that my eys does not get damaged and I can control the quality of my work. I think I need a microscope but I do not know which one. I do not want to risk money because I lost a log of money for magnification. Thanks

Regards](http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=38896)

I told you that the dissecting microscope I use has about 10 cm clearance. It only cost about 60 GBP.

Leon

Philba:
I have an olympus 1-20X zoom which is really nice. The zoom feature allows you a lot more flexibility than a fixed one. bought used at an auction.

I looked at the Olympus website and they seem to have very nice ones.

May I know, which model you got? and for how much? Thanks

Regards

It’s an SZ40 with an SZ-ST1 stand. Google couldn’t find a picture of the stand but it looks a lot like the one below. I think that’s an SZ40. The boom stand is nice since I can swing it out of the way when it’s not needed. I think I payed a bit less than $300 for both. At the time I didn’t think it was a great deal but the stands are pretty pricey. Clearance is a bit more than 10 cm. Oh and I was wrong about the zoom factor. It’s got 10X eyepieces and a .67 to 4X zoom built in so it goes from 6.7X to 40X.

http://www.spectraservices.com/Merchant … in_pic.jpg

by the way, it’s great for teaching science to my kids.

Philba:
It’s an SZ40 with an SZ-ST1 stand. Google couldn’t find a picture of the stand but it looks a lot like the one below. I think that’s an SZ40. The boom stand is nice since I can swing it out of the way when it’s not needed. I think I payed a bit less than $300 for both. At the time I didn’t think it was a great deal but the stands are pretty pricey. Clearance is a bit more than 10 cm. Oh and I was wrong about the zoom factor. It’s got 10X eyepieces and a .67 to 4X zoom built in so it goes from 6.7X to 40X.

http://www.spectraservices.com/Merchant … in_pic.jpg

by the way, it’s great for teaching science to my kids.

Thanks a lot for the information. I looked around a little bit and I think the one you got is very expensive. Well over 1000. Where did you get it? was it new or used?

I looked at eBay (see link below). This guy (Taximarket) seems to have good ones. Can you have a look at it and let me know which one would be more suitable for electronics assembly purpose. I would appreciate your help. Other people’s input is also welcome. Thanks

Regards

http://search.ebay.com/search/search.dl … category0=

It’s hard to say.

I think you want a boom mounted unit - the others look like there is no room to place the work item underneath.

I did notice that some of them range from 20X and up. I would think that you want to go at least to 10X and maybe even lower. I find that 40X is often way too high.

I certainly can’t speak to the quality of the products that guy sells. As with anything ebay, be careful.

Hi folks,

Thanks for the information you all provided. I took a look back at the digital microscope I had (see the link below). It seems I can use for the for soldering.

This is what I did:

I kept the microscope on its stand around 3-5 inches on top of the PCB. Then I adjusted the magnification to around 50. I could clearly see the very small pads and IC legs that I had trouble looking by bare eyes. I also adjusted the positionof the microscope such that when I move the board up, then on PC screen, the board will also moves up. I think I saved myself a couple of hundreds $$. I think it will work. The good part of it is that I can video tape all activities now.

http://www.bigc.com/demo/app_ComputerTelecom.php

regards