Need Help Finding a Post On This Forum

Blakejansen

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I believe the post was located in this thread https://gbatemp.net/threads/picofly-a-hwfly-switch-modchip.622701/page-528

There was someone that said that they lived in a third world country and worked out the best equipment to buy on a budget. I've been searching for this post for hours and decided I would ask my fellow GBAtemper's for assistance. I cannot believe I closed the tab with this post open. If someone can help me find the post I would really like that.
 
There are countless options elsewhere online for electronics lab on a budget type setups. I did have an article on electronics in the works but nailing the suggestions for a setup here is something I have to finish up.
Granted auyoue or whatever it was hot air station. They are not as nice as some that might use them every day will go in for but mine have variously earned their cost 10 times over during the course of random days, never mind the years I have used/owned them.
Wedge or well tip soldering iron or replacement tip for one. Chances are anything with a wedge tip will be fine out of the box, there are decent firestater irons rather than having to jump into the temperature controlled efforts.
Leaded solder, preferably with resin/rosin core and on the thinner side.
Braid/solder wick
Flux
Solder sucker.
Kapton/aramid tape.
Electrical tape
Abrasive tool (tile cleaners can work but they often have chemicals in you don't want, simple fibreglass pen is good stuff) or I guess you could deal with a scalpel, and you might want a scalpel if you are cutting traces for something.
Contact cleaner.
Basic my first multimeter should be fine (no need to jump right into fluke or anything silly). If you want to step it up slightly into something with a bit more accuracy and a continuity beep test then that would probably be my first choice (assuming you are not lumped with a cheap tool shop soldering iron).
Epoxy, superglue and hot glue can all fill or protect things that might need protecting. If you only need a thin layer where you scratched off some mask then clear (or whatever your chosen colour) nail polish is good stuff and actually what the high end pro custom nonsense is.

Depending upon what you are doing (mod install is different to repair which is different to analysis, or if you prefer there is a reason I did not ponder oscilloscopes in the above bit) you can skip a few of those as well.

Also the search bar in the top right of the page can restrict to thread only searches if you can remember some phrasing.
 
There are countless options elsewhere online for electronics lab on a budget type setups. I did have an article on electronics in the works but nailing the suggestions for a setup here is something I have to finish up.
Granted auyoue or whatever it was hot air station. They are not as nice as some that might use them every day will go in for but mine have variously earned their cost 10 times over during the course of random days, never mind the years I have used/owned them.
Wedge or well tip soldering iron or replacement tip for one. Chances are anything with a wedge tip will be fine out of the box, there are decent firestater irons rather than having to jump into the temperature controlled efforts.
Leaded solder, preferably with resin/rosin core and on the thinner side.
Braid/solder wick
Flux
Solder sucker.
Kapton/aramid tape.
Electrical tape
Abrasive tool (tile cleaners can work but they often have chemicals in you don't want, simple fibreglass pen is good stuff) or I guess you could deal with a scalpel, and you might want a scalpel if you are cutting traces for something.
Contact cleaner.
Basic my first multimeter should be fine (no need to jump right into fluke or anything silly). If you want to step it up slightly into something with a bit more accuracy and a continuity beep test then that would probably be my first choice (assuming you are not lumped with a cheap tool shop soldering iron).
Epoxy, superglue and hot glue can all fill or protect things that might need protecting. If you only need a thin layer where you scratched off some mask then clear (or whatever your chosen colour) nail polish is good stuff and actually what the high end pro custom nonsense is.

Depending upon what you are doing (mod install is different to repair which is different to analysis, or if you prefer there is a reason I did not ponder oscilloscopes in the above bit).

Also the search bar in the top right of the page can restrict to thread only searches if you can remember some phrasing.

I have a weird tendency to open up 120 tabs on my laptop. I know I could find alternative equipment than what was mentioned, but I want to find the exact post as now I am bothered that I lost it in my tabs.

I don't want to seem ungrateful since you took time to right all of that out, just really want to find this post as I have been searching for hours.
 
I have not been able to find any other post that mentioned “3rd world country,” could you provide other keywords?

Sure, the user stated that in his country quality "tools" could not be found so he learned to find the best tools that were available in his "country" after "trail and error" . The conversation was centered around scopes.
 

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