Si
I think this is one of the best. Except for the metal spring, the rest of the mechanism is all plastic.
I use a Graylab to time development (B&W) and the Jingle Bell times the other steps which only need to be 30sec accuracy.
Omega made a plug-in version that is similar. This one, of course, requires no electrical power.
View attachment 260557
es una buena opción siempre que la unidad sean minutos,
hay uno opción de bs 777 process timer (baeuerle)
tiene 5 programas con 9 secuencias cada uno
Permite configurar en minutos o segundos
cuenta con avance automático o manual (en un mismo programa se puede hacer mixto)
tiene una señal auditiva de 5 segundos antes de finalizar.
el punto no tan lindo es manejar con las manos húmedas, a la larga daña el sistema o lo degrada.
otra opción de vieja escuela son los crometros Jhungas
van algunas de las fotos de los equipos..
Arduino es el camino, hay varios desarrollos de f/stop y de timer, por el momento no he visto algo comercial.
se que hay código abierto con la programación y el plano para el desarrollo del timer..
It is a good option as long as the unit is minutes,
There is a choice of bs 777 process timer (baeuerle)
has 5 programmes with 9 sequences each
Allows to configure in minutes or seconds
It has automatic or manual advance (in the same program you can do mixed)
It has an audible signal 5 seconds before it ends.
The not-so-cute point is to drive with wet hands, in the long run it damages the system or degrades it.
Another old-school option is the Junghans chrometers
Here are some photos of the teams.
Arduino is the way, there are several f/stop and timer developments, for the moment I haven't seen anything commercial.
I know that there is open source with the programming and the plan for the development of the timer..