Blinky's Lab

Geiger-Counters

All posts tagged Geiger-Counters by Blinky's Lab
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    A little gem - The Yaorea YRG01 Pt.3 - Improving the mod - Now with Blue blinky LED!
    I have a few of these little counters on hand and decided to mod a few. One I have at my office sat on my desk, and another two I'll be sending out in the wild. My original intention was to mod a bunch of them and sell them to potential radmon.org users as a 'works right out of the box' counter submitting to radmon.org. I changed my mind after realizing they take a lot longer to actually mod than I initially thought (because I'm doing a much better job on these than the first), and that recently a version of ESPGeiger firmware was released with a bug that made them unable to update
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    Radspod One is back online after a long hiatus
    On 24/11/2024 Radspod One went offline. It had been just doing it's job for 8 years non-stop, with the odd break, usually PC/server related. This is the very first counter I got online years back when I only had half a clue. 😂 On the 24th the server eventually died. Capacitors had gone bad on the mainboard and around the time I just couldn't be bothered repairing a machine that should have been recycled a long time ago. So it got left. I eventually got fed up of seeing it blinking away outside and doing nothing more, so it was time to give it a good service and a full bill of health. It was
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    Adding live high voltage reading to the modified GK Radmon Geiger counter
    Modifying my GK Radmon kit Geiger counter to run ESPGeiger firmware has gained a little interest in it. John (BroHogan) the creator of the GK Radmon and other kit counters caught wind of this and appears very happy for me to be slicing and dicing his work - all in the good spirit of things, and Steadramon, the writer of the ESPGeiger firmware is looking if he can make a drop-in version of his ESPGeiger firmware that can be loaded onto the GK Radmon (and probably GK Radmon Plus too) without the need to modify the counter itself. That would be very cool. It has also spurred on an ESPGeiger
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    Modifying the GK Radmon Geiger counter to run ESPGeiger firmware
    Please note that this mod is no longer necessary as the pins can be selected within the ESPGeiger firmware settings. A couple of days ago Steadramon released an updated version of his ESPGeiger firmware, which included a new webhook feature I had been patiently waiting for. This got me playing about with ESPGeiger again and the thought crossed my mind "can I get it to run on my GK Radmon?" I bought my GK Radmon kit about five years back. I didn't like the original firmware much. Not that it was bad, it just didn't suit the way I use my counters. The original firmware was written for very low
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    A little gem - The Yaorea YRG01 Pt.2 - Modding for Radmon.org
    I couldn't wait to tinker with this so I decided to mod this in lieu of getting the ESP-12 modules and programmer. Using a scope I found the connection points I needed, Soldered some wires on. Soldered a Wemos D1 Mini clone on the other end, installed ESPGeiger 0.7.0, and boom! Literally as simple as that. Using the scope I checked the ribbon cable pins one by one and found the pulse coming from the PSU board. I didn't want to solder right on the ribbon, it looks janky already, so probed about and found that it is connected to L12. The MCU side of the inductor is where I soldered the pulse
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    A little gem - The Yaorea YRG01 Pt.1 - Review
    Yaorea YRG01 I bought another cheap Chinese counter from Aliexpress and I am impressed, especially for the price of £27 shipped to my door. Despite its cheap appearance it actually offers a lot of bang for buck. I haven't looked into it closely, but there seems to be a lot of attention to detail, and I reckon whoever designed this really gave a damn about it. 😄 It came up in suggested products on Aliexpress and I wouldn't have bothered about it if not for the fact that someone reviewed it and posted pictures of its insides. "Okay, a glass tube... Ooh a separate PSU board with a big hunking
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    Replacing the LiPo battery on a Radiacode 101
    *** Please note: Working with lithium batteries can potentially be hazardous. Damaging the battery can potentially cause fire or explosion. Learn and understand the risks before performing such a repair. *** I had to replace the battery in my Radiacode 101 as it was becoming potentially dangerous. I noticed the main button on the Radiacode wasn't pressing in properly and was sticking at times, so I popped the unit open and found the battery had expanded and was putting pressure on the circuit board, and thus making the button tight. The battery hadn't expanded like other LiPo's I have had,
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    HFS-P3 Pen type pocket geiger counter / dosimeter Pt.2
    I was asked by Gissio to try and download the original firmware from my HFS-P3, so I tried. Alas, no joy so far. ☹️ Under the battery (stuck down with sticky tape) is a pin header. Probably designed to have a pogo pin connector connect to it as there is no room to solder on an actual pin header. I just soldered wires to it directly. I managed to work out the pins by tracing the circuit, but I had to use my microscope as the connections on the MCU really are that small! I took photos of both sides and flipped one then overlaied one over the other so I could line up the vias on the board. You
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    Hacking the Gamma Scout Alert to Work with Radmon.org
    A member (of radmon.org) asked me if the Gamma Scout would/could work with radmon.org using the USB and software the counter came with. The answer to that is a simple, no, not out of the box, but it could be done with a quick hack. Simply add a couple of wires and connect them straight to an ESP8266 or similar MCU. This guide only covers the 'Alert' model. There may be differences with other Gamma Scout models. Here is how: Open up the Gamma Scout and locate the small transistor at the top left of the board, right above the pin header. There we are going to solder on a wire to the middle pin
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    HFS-P3 Pen type pocket geiger counter / dosimeter Pt.1
    I have seen these kicking around the usual suspects (Ebay, Amazon, Aliexpress etc.) for a little while now and after watching (a not very informative YouTube video) I decided to get one and see just what it is and is it any good. TLDR; You get what you pay for. I paid about £32 for this from Aliexpress.com but have seen them for as little as £25 on Aliexpress.com and as high as £60 on Ebay and Amazon. The unit is very small and packs a tiny 150mAh LiPo cell, 48mm x 7mm (external dimensions) HH614 GM Tube, tiny OLED screen, a massive overkill ARM Cortex-M0 FM33LC043N MCU from Fudan Micro and