Suggestion for a bench top magnifying lamp?

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Johnny1234

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 27, 2021
Messages
151
Location
Dupont, PA
Hi all.
Hope this is an appropriate category for this question. I am look for a magnifying lamp for my work bench.
Looking for something sturdy and reliable as I have run into to many POS in my travels. Maybe around 100
dollar range.
Many Thanks
Johnny1234
 
If you're getting on in years and working on surface mount things then it's worth getting something with really good optics in the lens, I've found cheap ones to have more distortion, smaller usable area and poor depth of field. You can get much better quality in the second hand market. I got a great deal recently on 5 medical grade inspection lamps from a doctors surgery that was closing down. Still had fluoro tubes but you can easily get LED replacements on Amazon etc.
 
I have exactly the same model. Had it about 10 years now. Works perfectly. Also you can use it with reading glasses and get a kind of telescope effect. Very useful when reading values of very tiny components.

Cheers

ian
 
i found those lamps ( still have one from a doctors office ,though ) annoying.
dont know , i used them wrong most propably but it always got foggy from breath.
also i find the magnifying factor to low for my eyes .
i now use smaller lenses removed from a beamer/projector .
perfect for me if you need to find broken traces or shorts after reflowing.
 
i found those lamps ( still have one from a doctors office ,though ) annoying.
dont know , i used them wrong most propably but it always got foggy from breath.
also i find the magnifying factor to low for my eyes .
i now use smaller lenses removed from a beamer/projector .
perfect for me if you need to find broken traces or shorts after reflowing.
Something like this might work for you instead. I have something similar that's a little older with a weaker light and without the swappable lenses. However it does have 3 lenses that you can "stack" to get incredibly close magnification.

A jeweler's loupe is also useful for me when inspecting PCBs or capsule damage.
 
Thanks for the replies.
Going to try the $35 dollar lamp from amazon, will let you know how it works out.

You said you wanted "something sturdy and reliable as I have run into to many POS in my travels",
that lamp from amazon is very fragile and flimsy.
Look at the arm joints and compare to the lamp I posted, you will see that the one I use is much more robust.

That Amazon lamp will break in a pinch
 
I use this one, it works fine

View attachment 138807
I’ve been using the one from Harbor Freight that’s very similar to that for the past 5+ years. Works great, and the magnification is good enough to read the dumb print on the blue TDK and Murata MLCC’s. I’m particular about lighting color temperature, for my sanity and shooting photos, and changed the fluorescent ring to a 3000K.
 
I am look for a magnifying lamp for my work bench.

SERVING SUGGESTION 193874 -- Use a head-worn magnification visor like jewelers do.

I HATE using a magnification lamp for multiple reasons.

1) The boom arm gets in the way.
2) The lamp is either too bright or too dim and may glare on the object.
3) The magnification is often too weak for the task or object
4) The boom and lamp constantly consume valuable air space over my desk
5) Expensive
6) Did I mention, it is always int he way over the desk?

The photos depict my alternative - whether they provide mor or less magnification depends on the model. I prefer the first one with white frame - they all work over eye glasses, too. While they may have LED lamps, I prefer other lighting over the desk for that.

Just MY take. Your mileage may vary. / James



magnification visor  (1).jpgmagnification visor  (2).jpgmagnification visor  (3).jpgmagnification visor  (4).jpg
 
I’ve been using the one from Harbor Freight that’s very similar to that for the past 5+ years. Works great, and the magnification is good enough to read the dumb print on the blue TDK and Murata MLCC’s. I’m particular about lighting color temperature, for my sanity and shooting photos, and changed the fluorescent ring to a 3000K.

The Murata MLCC print is SOOOOO TINY. Great caps (we use them in our Hartley oscillator DC-DC converters and a few other spots too on Vanguard mics) but if they fall out of the bag and you have to sort them, it makes your retinae bleed.
 
Why not get an industrial video cam and use a VGA monitor on a stand?
I just made the switch from a 5x lighted magnifying glass and it keeps the soldering fumes out of your face AND a wider range of magnification

I bought a C-mount adapter to fit a quality 50mm lens off an old 35 mm SLR to the video cam hooked up to an old but nice monitor and it is fantastic. The adapter and camera cost less than 50 bucks.
 
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