Microscope for cartridge inspection


I'm looking for a microscope for cartridge inspection (hence the tittle) and came across this in my search.

https://andonstar.com/product/ad246s-m-ad249s-m-3-lenses-10-7-in-lcd-hdmi-digital-microscope/

Does anyone have any experience with this scope or this company?

audiorusty

USB microscopes are fine for checking VTA/SRA, but to look at a stylus you really need a good optical microscope, and there you pay for quality! I was lucky when the hospital lab bought a new Leica they gave me their old binocular Olympus. I used it for years to do urine microscopy and hanging drop slides, but now it has a new lease on life!

I’ve got an Olympus too, picked up from NIH surplus. It’s not ideal because of limitations on near object focus, but good enough for my needs.

Post pics of what your device shows, and links to the device, the results reveal what we can’t perceive from words.

I really could not visualize what 1000x would look like, and how close it needs to get, and the short focus distances are hard to imagine.

you need light all around without shadows, and angles to avoid glare

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mine, as I said, is cheap. I just bought it to learn something about how decent cheap ones have become, the pic shows it.

check specs carefully, the top one, not disparaging it, but the plastic lens gives 510x, it is 3x digital that magnifies that to higher numbers, now it might be terrific, but I want to see a pic of what you see before I choose/buy it..

A really high quality microscope is essential for determining wear on the tip of a stylus.  It also takes practice to develop proficiency.  I am blessed to have two old, but excellent microscopes, both Wild-Herrbrugg, an M3 and an M5.  The M5 is superior, but they both are excellent.  To use them properly you need to mount the stylus underneath the lens so that the tip of the stylus is facing straight up.  I use Silly Putty, but whatever it is important to ensure that the stylus is firmly planted such that it will not move.  Excellent light is important.  I found a ring of LED lights that clamp to the microscope work better than the two arm arrangement that I used to use.  As I key this message I am in NH, but when I return to our home in FL week after next where this equipment is housed I will set it up, take some photos and post them here if I can figure out how to do so.  

@johnss 

You may want to look for a direct view microscope either stereo or mono view with a 1500X or 2000x magnification range. 

Do you have a specific brand or model that you recommend?  the ones I am finding in my searches are prohibitively expensive.