Archived from radmon.org - originally posted 20/12/2021 [Updated: 22/12/2021] Its the first day of holidays and I'm bored already.... So I cooked up a neat wifi/wemos d1 mini/arduino/LED display for displaying a station's current CPM. It works by simply connecting to one's Wi-Fi and then goes to the URL, pulls the data, strips the first space and everything afterwards then converts what is left to a float (the CPM count from the start of the string) and displays it. The bar graph LEDs are mapped from 0 to 100 CPM at full scale deflection, but the 7 segment display will display up to 999.9
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Archived from radmon.org - originally posted 19/12/2021 Whilst looking around the internet I found a trove of old declassified CIA documents. Among these were one called 'Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Accident CIA, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Congressional, GAO, and Foreign Press Monitoring Files' that goes into some detail about the accident from the perspective of the authorities. There was originally 4010 pages and sadly this has been shaved down to a mere 224 pages in the released document. An excerpt of this document: THE ACCIDENT According to reports filed with -
Archived from radmon.org - originally posted 05/12/2021 Something I really dislike is planned obsolescence, and closely 2nd to that, where things are not user serviceable and have to be returned to the manufacturer for minor things such as battery replacement. I'm a large advocate of 'right to repair'. The battery in the Gamma Scout is a 10 year, 3.6v Lithium battery soldered directly onto the board. Gamma Scout (at last check some time ago) wanted 40 Euro plus shipping one way to Germany to replace the battery. Pfft! The original battery is about £20 all in for a replacement, but I decided
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Archived from radmon.org - originally posted 04/12/2021 Well, I managed to destroy my second SBT-10A. The first destroyed itself as far as I am concerned as I took it out of it's box one day, and it was toast - post here . This one was my fault. I dropped a polarizing filter on the mica window (only from about 4cm) but it hit it and went with a proper loud bang, right in my face and showered my microscope and desk with bits of mica, then the black bits on the inside of the mica just turned to a yellow schmoo in the air atmosphere. It would have been a nice experiment had I actually planned


