On Thu, 14 Sep 2006 19:09:15 +0200, Tony Smith <
ajsmith@...>
wrote:
>
> Yeah, header pins, leaving the component lead long, works fine. As I
> said,
> hobbiests are cheap. And they use the cheapest clip going, being the
> alligator clip. When you pick up the board and turn it over, half the
> time
> they either fall off or short against something else.
> Using header pins as vias can lead to solder joint failure. Won't stop
> people doing it, but at least you know there's a possibility for failure.
> If you've got better stuff, go use it. Some people don't use test pins
> at
> all. Some people have never seen pogo pins. Most don't have a scope.
> It's called homebrew for a reason, ghetto tech might be a better word.
> Here's a good ghetto example - http://uanr.com/sdfloppy/. Work? Sure.
> Ghetto? Sure. Possible problems? Sure. Vibration, crosstalk, all the
> fun
> stuff.
> My point was simply real test pins are a funny shape for a reason. Why
> this
> surprises you or why you actually care enough to respond is beyond me.
> Tony
Ok, when i meet a Fluke or Tektronix or Siemens or Norma engineer i will
tell them that they are doing it all wrong and square pins are not
acceptable for test pins. I'm not sure if they will be insulted when i
tell them they are ghetto technicians ;-).
I'll just tell them the great Tony Smith has said so, and he must know
after all, i'm sure they'll immediately see their folly.
No many people will indeed not have seen a pogo pin, because they are
utterly useless for anything other than series production testing. We were
talking about test _pins_, not _pads_, you do remember that?
I care enough to respond because i can't stand it when people write
nonsense and insist on it without giving any decent reasons, let alone
proof.
ST