It started as a little test, so I used what was near my workbench.
I found a knob that is normally use on a potmeter but this one was missing the interior.
It also had a nice plate that would give it a surface to tape and remove. The dialplate fits with four pins in the knob.
I took a 5mm extra bright white LED, I still had from samples, calculate the resistor and soldered the resistor on the LED, attached wired and protective plastic (krimpkous). Than place it in the knob with the LED lens almost out on the bottom and glued it with hot melt together.
Double side foam tape on the dial and then off for testing.
I found that the best position was for the LED set almost on the corner. Easy to see when you stand in front of the meter, where you get the best reflection. Than mark that LED position, take the tape plastic of and fix the assembly in the right place.
Then you can get the RFXphoto sensor and hold it more or less at the same hight, when you angle it a bit, you can see the LED light projected on it and then it is also a matter of marking and glueing.
I didn't needed to adjust anything in the RFXmeter. But I varied the LED current to see what was an optimum between power use and still getting a reading.
