Keyboard Tinker Work Bench Gallery

User avatar
darkcruix

10 Feb 2023, 22:00

In case there are other ones out there who are tinkering with old keyboards and have their own work bench, this is the topic to share yours.
I know, things can always change, but I would be interested what tools / work bench others are using. I have my little "man cave" in the basement with a few items I gathered over the years. Below are a few "unfiltered" photos ...
Spoiler:
IMG_3679.jpeg
IMG_3679.jpeg (3.25 MiB) Viewed 8188 times
IMG_3680.jpeg
IMG_3680.jpeg (2.17 MiB) Viewed 8188 times
IMG_3678.jpeg
IMG_3678.jpeg (3.63 MiB) Viewed 8188 times

User avatar
Muirium
µ

11 Feb 2023, 10:13

I’ve just moved, so no pics till the house is fixed up enough to resume smaller, keyboard-sized, projects. ;)

Your wall mounted tools are smart. I fumble around much too much in dark little drawers.

What’s the Cube doing, besides providing a keyboard and mouse a posh little penthouse? For a long while I had a similarly specced (and speakered) iMac G4 providing workspace listening, including many keyboard operations like my first awakened Kishsaver
Spoiler:
Image

User avatar
darkcruix

11 Feb 2023, 12:35

Muirium wrote:
11 Feb 2023, 10:13
I’ve just moved, so no pics till the house is fixed up enough to resume smaller, keyboard-sized, projects. ;)

Your wall mounted tools are smart. I fumble around much too much in dark little drawers.

What’s the Cube doing, besides providing a keyboard and mouse a posh little penthouse? For a long while I had a similarly specced (and speakered) iMac G4 providing workspace listening, including many keyboard operations like my first awakened Kishsaver
Spoiler:
Image
The Cube has been emptied and I fitted it with a new power supply and parts of a M1 Mac mini. I even got the proximity sensor and LED working.
I think I could retro-fit a M2 Mac mini into a iMac G4 Lamp :) On the 20" model it shoud be a bit simpler because of the LCD they've been using in it. Downside is the cold cathode backlight of those displays - they just fade over time or worse, lose brightness on the edges because of moisture creeping between the foil sandwich.

Love the Saltire in the background ;)

I should get one of those:
https://www.amazon.de/-/en/AZ-FLAG-Bava ... B01LWX0QQK
41x-JoGs37L._AC_.jpg
41x-JoGs37L._AC_.jpg (14.81 KiB) Viewed 8092 times

User avatar
Muirium
µ

11 Feb 2023, 18:55

Going by this, Bayern definitely has the best flag of the Länder. In my view: every well designed flag can be drawn by a child in under a minute. Animals and hordes of pentagrams be damned! ;)

I too have long thought of modding the G4 with a Mac Mini. Bit fiddly with that old cold cathode display. Never have gotten round to it. Besides, my iMac is the middle child at 17 inch. A pretty thing but an awkward one.

User avatar
darkcruix

11 Feb 2023, 19:00

Let's just say, blue and white colored flags are just awesome ;)

User avatar
JP!

11 Feb 2023, 19:26

darkcruix wrote:
10 Feb 2023, 22:00
In case there are other ones out there who are tinkering with old keyboards and have their own work bench, this is the topic to share yours.
I know, things can always change, but I would be interested what tools / work bench others are using. I have my little "man cave" in the basement with a few items I gathered over the years.
A literal "man cave" would be an ultimate dream for me. Space to work on electronics, bicycles, cars, a machine shop, wood shop, etc.

My tool collection is still in it's infacy compared to this. I would love to hear about some of your essential, favorite or interesting tools if you have the time.

Findecanor

11 Feb 2023, 20:48

I've got an old battered kitchen table propped up in my bedroom, which is always full of various stuff: most often shoe boxes of tools and materials.
Some people would call me a hoarder, but I do get rid of stuff that I don't find useful. I just need something like a separate hobby room or garage for more space for my hobbies.

User avatar
darkcruix

11 Feb 2023, 23:12

JP! wrote:
11 Feb 2023, 19:26
...
My tool collection is still in it's infacy compared to this. I would love to hear about some of your essential, favorite or interesting tools if you have the time.
I can talk about the tools I constantly use. Some of them are inexpensive but others have been a large investment over time.

Let me talk about my soldering area first. I can talk about the other things as well, if people find it interesting.
I do like my soldering station a lot, even if it is not super expensive, it can be fitted with different standard tips and the heat can be adjusted in the range I need it (200'C to 400'C). It is the Atten AT-980D.
Spoiler:
IMG_3684.jpeg
IMG_3684.jpeg (211.26 KiB) Viewed 7987 times
The second most important piece was the de-soldering iron. Originally I bought it, because had a crusty F122 in my posession and de-soldering with the wig was a nightmare. I killed a via back then and thought I ruined the keyboard. Later when I did more and more vintage keyboard restoration or switch replacements, it is just so great to have. I bought the Komerci ZD-915. The best thing is the broad availability of the replacement parts. I already replaced the pistol once and the container.
Spoiler:
IMG_3685.jpeg
IMG_3685.jpeg (181.9 KiB) Viewed 7987 times
The hot air "gun" came much later in the game, when I did more and more SMD soldering. As soon as you want to play with your own PCBs or prepare controller for a project, this is the way to go. Also, it is nice for removing surface mount stuff from vintage boards (not so common). I bought the 858D FAOKZE Hot Air Soldering Station - definitely not the best one out there, but it has air pressure adjustment and heat adjustment for less than USD 50.
Spoiler:
IMG_3686.jpeg
IMG_3686.jpeg (193.99 KiB) Viewed 7987 times


My latest purchase is my stereo microscope (AMScope SM-4TZ). It was super expensive, but my previous one was too cheap to be any good. I should have invested in this one in the beginning. I think you can do a few things with a cheap microscope as well, but if you want to do more work on things, I'd say this is the one to consider:
Spoiler:
IMG_3689.jpeg
IMG_3689.jpeg (221.23 KiB) Viewed 7987 times
Obviously there a tons of things around soldering, which I use when doing stuff. Here's my table and what I always have next to the soldering mat:
- Flux Paste
- Dental Tool - especially important for vintage stuff when you need to get crusty things off of things
- Two pairs of my more expensive tweezers (titanium)
- Scraping scalpels
- Clipper
- De-solder wig (not in picture)
- Good solder spools in various sizes (not in picture)
Spoiler:
IMG_3699.jpeg
IMG_3699.jpeg (322.14 KiB) Viewed 7987 times

User avatar
jsheradin

12 Feb 2023, 03:03

I love seeing how others set up their work areas! I'll throw my current electronics bench out there:
IMG_2023-02-11-20-48-57-128.jpg
IMG_2023-02-11-20-48-57-128.jpg (282.57 KiB) Viewed 7947 times
I keep meaning to build a proper workbench but the shelving units work well enough that I can never muster the motivation.

User avatar
darkcruix

12 Feb 2023, 16:44

jsheradin wrote:
12 Feb 2023, 03:03
I love seeing how others set up their work areas! I'll throw my current electronics bench out there:
...
I keep meaning to build a proper workbench but the shelving units work well enough that I can never muster the motivation.
Great area - I wish I had so much space, but my 1950s house has only a partial basement. I love that corner and the lighting from under the shelf.

I am still playing with my space and moving some of my vintage computers into the attic.

User avatar
Scarpia

12 Feb 2023, 18:08

I love this!!! We bought our first house three years ago and I immediately set up a workshop in the cellar — I’ve never had the luxury of having a dedicated space where I could leave my tools and projects out, so this was a priority for me.

Tool-wise, the woodworking station has an old Swedish carpenter’s workbench, a decent DeWalt table saw, a lovely vintage Inca bandsaw, a beefy disc sander, and most of the common power tools (bought second hand; DeWalt, Makita and Hilti), a cheapo modern drill press, and a growing collection of hand planes, chisels, japanese pull saws, etc.
7FD663C8-077D-462C-905C-9575792B6725.jpeg
7FD663C8-077D-462C-905C-9575792B6725.jpeg (2.19 MiB) Viewed 7868 times
951F1CAC-B385-428D-9EA1-5EC7DB51393C.jpeg
951F1CAC-B385-428D-9EA1-5EC7DB51393C.jpeg (2.04 MiB) Viewed 7868 times
(I know the lighting is terrible in this corner. It’s a work in progress.)

The electronics station (which sadly sits just across from the dusty woodworking area) has a couple of old analog scopes, a nice Proxxon multitool, the TS100 soldering iron (flashed with the community firmware), a cheap bench power supply, a solder fume filter fan, and an ultrasonic cleaner. Nothing fancy here, just enough for me.
1449AD6F-FDE7-4FA6-AFD8-A872B607215F.jpeg
1449AD6F-FDE7-4FA6-AFD8-A872B607215F.jpeg (2.11 MiB) Viewed 7868 times

User avatar
JP!

12 Feb 2023, 20:28

darkcruix wrote:
11 Feb 2023, 23:12
I can talk about the tools I constantly use. Some of them are inexpensive but others have been a large investment over time.
Love this. A nice desoldering tool has been on my list for a while.

User avatar
darkcruix

14 Feb 2023, 18:36

Scarpia wrote:
12 Feb 2023, 18:08
I love this!!! We bought our first house three years ago and I immediately set up a workshop in the cellar — I’ve never had the luxury of having a dedicated space where I could leave my tools and projects out, so this was a priority for me.

Tool-wise, the woodworking station has an old Swedish carpenter’s workbench, a decent DeWalt table saw, a lovely vintage Inca bandsaw, a beefy disc sander, and most of the common power tools (bought second hand; DeWalt, Makita and Hilti), a cheapo modern drill press, and a growing collection of hand planes, chisels, japanese pull saws, etc.

7FD663C8-077D-462C-905C-9575792B6725.jpeg

951F1CAC-B385-428D-9EA1-5EC7DB51393C.jpeg

(I know the lighting is terrible in this corner. It’s a work in progress.)

The electronics station (which sadly sits just across from the dusty woodworking area) has a couple of old analog scopes, a nice Proxxon multitool, the TS100 soldering iron (flashed with the community firmware), a cheap bench power supply, a solder fume filter fan, and an ultrasonic cleaner. Nothing fancy here, just enough for me.

1449AD6F-FDE7-4FA6-AFD8-A872B607215F.jpeg
Love these pictures - thanks so much for sharing ....!!!!

Post Reply

Return to “Gallery”