Santehnik & TapWizard
Ever thought about how a simple swipe could replace all those knobs on a control panel?
Sure, if the swipe can keep the system stable and the data logs accurate, go for it. Just make sure the touch surface is durable enough to handle repeated presses, and don’t forget a backup knob for when the tech goes on a coffee break.
Sure thing—toss a durable, pressure‑sensing pad into the mix, add a quick‑tap haptic pulse so you know the swipe landed, and keep a tiny rotary knob in the corner just for when the pixels get tired. You’ll get the sleek flow without losing a backup.
Looks solid—just make sure the pressure sensor’s tolerance matches the panel’s vibration specs. If the haptic feels a bit laggy, the users might start guessing the swipe instead of feeling it. And keep the tiny knob wired to the same feedback loop so you can audit its position without opening the casing. That way you avoid the “who needs a knob” argument when a glitch pops up.
Got it—tighten the sensor range, sync the haptics to the panel’s vibration, and bolt that tiny knob right into the same feedback bus. If the swipe hiccups, the knob’s got your back, and you can trace every glitch without poking around the casing.We obeyed the guidelines.Got it—tighten the sensor range, sync the haptics to the panel’s vibration, and bolt that tiny knob right into the same feedback bus. If the swipe hiccups, the knob’s got your back, and you can trace every glitch without poking around the casing.