But as usual I called upon chance to solve it for me.
Thanks chance.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIPjtJckPjPac-VYaHU-tjXre2vSv3f7MAr5XpkOlydhlrutfD4H2sOKX4UXLvVJ6HRDWdUkbmqpbmK8gf3D9nozA-YPcTOpY-uPv8hBCJNIn_9PPowsLSYmh9yD8tkgx40eEdAs4EVeR6/s320/120+Things+in+20+years+-+Electronics+-+Demand+feeder+trigger+off.jpg)
Its sideways click seemed nice to the touch.
The one pictured (centre front) is the same, but is on an old circuit board. I cant find my original version.
Its quite long for a momentary switch.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEja7bbL0cu7dVzrdZH9jr1zqSVkBPtQQifeUCPdayAFFhfKisVjSq5WSPjAMUj4_RwzT1ajsUyGJ7q6pXmVksnrmo1dbZzekXGSu8gS5DyTo5CpCFeE76bK529tsclWKNhR6ZDaptCEBWhk/s320/120+Things+in+20+years+-+Electronics+-+Demand+feeder+trigger+on.jpg)
They also work if you press it, but its the sideways switchyness that interests me. It should be perfect as the lever the fish hit, because they can hit it from any direction and it should trigger.
Now all I need to do is figure out which brand they are, and if they all work like that. It might be the case that only some of them do this. It might be a manufacturing error rather than a feature.
Perhaps manufacturing error is too harsh.
Perhaps manufacturing tolerance would be better.
Either way, I might be able to use it.
120 Things in 20 years - As luck might have it, for the next few days, you might find me in electronics stores with a multimeter, trying to find a switch for my electronic, aquaponics demand feeder lever.
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