BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
The best tool for working with SMT is keen vision...which leaves me out.
My vision is getting crappier all the time, but I am not giving up yet. I am developing all kinds of tiny black spots that fly across my vision field, and weird local distortions. It is very frustrating. But the worst is a
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scintillating_scotoma, which is completely crazy and makes it impossible for me to do anything for the rest of the day. Luckily I've only had it a few times. Apparently it is a migraine symptom, but sometimes happens without a headache (as in my case).
I have a stereo microscope (for which I need to build a real LED illuminator), a couple of little camera microscope USB devices, and a variety of magnifiers.
The microscope is old and a little hard as the image darkens unless my eyeball is exactly in the right spot in front of the ocular. I should really get a proper industrial microscope with a camera. One day.
My favorite magnifier is a cheapo visor-style one with (pre-led-era) tiny flashlights which I lost the covers for long ago and never use. The magnifier has a flip-down secondary lens, is entirely filthy and scratched, but I use it all the time! I can fit my glasses with astigmatism correction under it.
I also bought dentist-style binoculars with eyeglass frames. These are interesting because they focus 2-3 feet away, which sometimes saves your back and gets your nose off the workbench, which is probably not that clean. But because of my astigmatism they are hard for me to use as they are quite good and I expect a sharp image! The crappy magnifier is so bad that I expect nothing, but I can wear my regular glasses underneath.
I also have an eyeglasses-with-removable-plastic-lenses kind of magnifier, with a set of 4 or 5 lenses. The optics are crappy plastic but they work fairly well for short stints. They are a little heavy on the nose and leave a mark after a while.
Good lighting is essential. Luckily we live in the golden age of LEDs. I have powerful worklights, and some multi-led stick-on strips to light up the operating theater. The trick is finding ones that are not pulsing slow enough to be annoying when scanning across them.