Stefan,
I think your idea will work, but have concern about using "sheet
metal" for the wiper...
Is this for a production item, or just a few?
Because I'd sure use the phosphor bronze/beryllium copper/whatever of
a "real" wiper(s) from the switch you CAN get. Then use your pcb to
make the other half.
I believe you will have MUCH better success this way.
I'd also use an IGUS iglide circlip bushing for the switch "axle".
These are made for thin sheet stock, and again will improve the
smoothness and lifetime of your product/project. They're cheap and
available worldwide as well.
Hope this helps,
Ballendo
--- In
Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Stefan Trethan"
<stefan_trethan@g...> wrote:
>
> >
> > What are you switching? How many positions do you really
_need_? Have
> > you
> > noticed that rotary switches are in large part going away, or at
least
> > they
> > have been since the fifties? There's a reason for that. Feel
free to
> > take
> > this over to Electronics101 if we get too far off the topic for
in here.
> >
>
> I need 2∗10 positions, and can only get 2∗6 or 1∗12.
> For selecting cell count on a battery charger (no current at all).
> Almost all handheld meters i've ever seen use rotary switches, and
all i
> took
> apart had "custom" printed contacts. Oh, yes, there was one rotten
piece
> of bad engineering
> that had four buttons instead. The damn thing had dozens of design
flaws,
> like blowing up
> each time you pulled the current plug....
>
> I could try to pull some mechanical stunt and stack 2 1∗12 switches.
> I don't know if that would be possibe with the switches i can get.
> But then, one switch for 2.50eur is not exactly cheap, not speaking
of 2...
>
> ST