I never push them back in. Tape them to the vent band, close to the hole they
are coming out of.
- iPhone mail
On Jan 19, 2017, at 12:48 PM, Chris J Kobel <chris.j.kobel@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
More and more, this conversation is encouraging me to keep twisting my wires
together. Somebody mentioned it previously…is there a “right” way to do it,
to go along with all the wrongs ways I’ve tried?
(I do try to insulate the twisted wires and tie a piece of string on them so
I can fish them out of a breather hole to disconnect them after a flight…)
Chris Kobel
From: roc-chat-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:roc-chat-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On ;
Behalf Of R Dierking
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2017 12:40 PM
To: Kenneth Brown <ken@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; roc-chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [roc-chat] Re: Switch Warning - Schurter 110-220
Sorry if there was a misunderstanding Ken. I don’t routinely have the
soldering iron dwell on the contacts that long. Just trying to figure out
potential failure modes for this switch. The objective is to provide
information to people that have already used these switches in projects, and
maybe others that will use them in the future. Verses, “hey, don’t use these
switches.”
For example: If someone is planning on using one of these switches, they
could have good information about how to install them and solder the
contacts. Also, and I think this is very important, they should be advised
on how to check the installed switch for problems before flying their
project.
This helps not only for the case of using these switches, but for using other
electronics as well. Having detailed information on the device, and testing
before flying a project is always a good idea.
Richard Dierking