Magnifiers and Inspection Aids

This page covers aids to seeing better.

Summary

Many faults are identified visually, but some are hard to see with the naked eye. A good light and some form of magnification makes it a lot easier.

Safety

Warning03.png
When working under a magnifier your face will usually be considerable closer to the work. Take extra care with sharp tools, and to avoid breathing fumes when soldering.
Also, when working under a magnifier your peripheral vision may be restricted, limiting your view of nearby hazards.
LED lamps are often extremely bright. Try not to let them shine directly into your face as they may cause temporary blind spots.

Introduction

Young people with normal sight can often focus on objects as close as 5 or 10cm, but our "near point" (as it's called) recedes with age. This varies from person to person but typically might start to become noticeable around the age of 40. The near point for a person with normal sight is generally considered to be around 25cm. Once your near point exceeds that your optometrist may recommend reading glasses, but well before then you will benefit from some form of aid for very close work.

The simplest aid is good light, whether natural or artificial. Under strong light the pupil of the eye reduces in size, increasing the range of distances that are in focus. Photographers will be familiar with exactly the same effect, as an increase in depth of focus with a reduced lens aperture.

The other simple aid is a magnifying glass. What this does is to bring the near point closer, allowing smaller details to be seen.

Inspection Lights

A good light is essential for working on small items, whether natural light from a good sized window, a good room light, or a desk lamp. But you may well also need a torch of some sort.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
A head torch.

These come in many forms. When the view is restricted, for example to examine a screw head at the bottom of a recess, you generally need something small that you can hold close to your eye (but shining away from it) in order to shine onto the subject. In other situations, oblique illumination works best as it avoids bright reflections from shiny surfaces.

Modern inspection lights use LEDs, giving a very bright light.

A small LED torch is invaluable for general use. A head torch strapped onto the forehead leaves both hands free and gives illumination from a point close to the eyes. A small torch with the LED on the end of a flexible goose-neck allows you to get the light into inaccessible spaces.

Magnifying Glasses

A pair of cheap readyspecs.
Flip-up clip-on spectacles.

If your distance vision is good (with contact lenses if worn) then a cheap pair of "readyspecs" makes close work very much easier. These are available without prescription from many outlets, at various strengths. Try a few pairs and select one that allows you to see clearly at the closest distance you could comfortably work at. The strength is measured in dioptres, and you will probably find a value of +3 to +4 will work well. If your near point without glasses is 25cm, a +4 pair would bring it in to half that distance.

Magnifying glasses.

If you wear glasses all the time and in particular if the prescription for your eyes is significantly different between right and left, a pair of clip-on flip-up magnifying glasses may be your best option. As a rough guide only, you might try a +1.5 dioptre pair if you don't use separate glasses for reading and distance, or to go with your reading glasses if you do. In the latter case you might try a 3.5 dioptre pair to go with your distance (only) glasses.

An illuminated magnifying glass.

Magnifying glasses come in a range of sizes, strengths and styles. The strength is given as a magnification, e.g. 2x. This means that for a person with a near point of 25cm, held close to the eye it will bring your near point to half of that, resulting in an image twice the size on your retina. From this you can see that a pair of +4 dioptre glasses are the same as a 2x magnifying glass.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Jeweller's eye loupe.

Beyond around 5x the aberrations inherent in a simple lens start to reduce its effectiveness. Magnifying glasses with higher quality compound lenses are available at a price.

For most purposes you will get the best results by holding a magnifying glass close to your eye then moving the object towards you until it's in focus, rather than holding the magnifying glass close to the object.

You may be able to find a magnifying glass with built-in illumination. These are often used by the partially sighted.

A jeweller's eye loupe is very useful, especially for very close inspection. A 5x magnification works well, allowing very small details to be seen. With a little practice you can hold it in your eye socket, leaving both hands free.

Other Magnifiers

Professional repairers regularly undertaking surface mount rework would consider an optical binocular microscope essential, but this would be beyond the means of most amateurs needing it only occasionally. There are several alternatives though.

A smartphone camera will often focus down to a few centimetres, and if in addition you zoom in you can get a very respectable magnification. This can be increased even further with a smartphone clip-on macro lens. At these magnifications, holding it steady becomes a problem and leaves only one hand free.

Pocket microscopes are available for around £10, some in the style of a pen or other easily pocketable form, and some with a built-in LED. These tend to have a limited field of view. In common with other optical microscopes they present an upside down image.

A USB microscope may be more practical. The cheaper ones start at a similar price but may not have very good resolution. Also, you need to find room on your workbench for a PC and monitor or a laptop. Another disadvantage is that there may be a noticeable delay in the display which you need to get used to if you're using it for something like microsoldering rather than simply for inspection.