I started building my Crack and things were looking pretty good, until they weren't. Things got bad. Then they got worse...
I probably won't need to state this, but I'm pretty much a novice at all this. I assembled the case and the snap on/screw on components and then soldered the power switch. I'm pretty sure that went fine, but my first warning sign came up and indicated I really don't know what the heck I'm doing with a multimeter. Many of the readings are clear enough, but some just flummox me (it is an fairly ancient analog meter). In particular, low and high readings for resistance aren't super clear. But, the tests on the switch were showing up on opposite ends of the scale when toggling on/off, so I figured I was good and forged ahead.
I measured my voltage at 127V and proceeded with attaching/soldering the wires following the 115V to 130V section. Testing seemed to confirm all was good.
However, when I moved to the green wiring, things went down hill in a hurry.
First, I couldn't find a green wire. After searching a little harder on the distant edges of my work area, I realized I had a green wire...and it was sitting with some red, white and black wires. Not ones I had used, mind you. After attaching the tiny buss wire, it didn't bother me in the slightest to continue on with the same gauge black and red wires I had carefully laid out next to the buss wire. At least not at the time.
So, I set about unsoldering all the little wires and replacing them with the right wires. As I proceeded, I was getting some strange readings from my multimeter. I decided it needed new batteries. I replaced them and things were still kind of inconsistent and I decided it was probably not calibrated properly and I really didn't feel comfortable that I wasn't just screwing it up more. When I was trying to zero it out, the needle wouldn't get close to 0. So, I decided I'd get a digital multimeter and get rid of some of the guesswork.
While not top of the line, it is an autoranging meter (Klein MM400) which seemed easier to deal with and plenty good for my purposes. But, I still can't tell how the heck to determine high and low values for resistance. The instructions are kind of vague. 0L seemed like it ought to be low but I couldn't figure out if I was hitting overlimit(or I wasn't). And, if I recall it kind of seemed backwards from what it should be. But, I forged ahead hoping once I got everything back together, if I was getting decent readings in the testing, things were probably fine.
So, I finished up the initial soldering of the red/black wires and did the testing. Sadly, nothing was working. I was getting 0 or close to 0 volts on both tests. I assume I burned up the switch after soldering and unsoldering a few times. But, I don't really know how to verify it, short of tearing everything back apart and trying to burn up more components in the process. And, I still can't read the darn meter, so it is unclear I'll be able to prove anything.
I'm thinking it will just be easier to order a new switch and see what happens. But, are there other things I should be doing? And, is there any way to forge ahead while I wait for the switch? I assume since the switch has some resistance, I can't just wrap the wires attached to the switch together and treat it as "on", for the time being. Of course, I don't want to proceed without passing the tests, I'm just looking for a way to do the tests without the switch.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
thanks,
sf