So, I decided to finally tackle the ‘tna aj’ thing today. Been putting it off for a while, you know how it is.

First off, I gathered all the bits and pieces I thought I’d need. Spread them out on the desk. Took a good look. Seemed straightforward enough at first glance, but you never know with these things. Then I started the initial setup. Just followed the basic steps I had noted down earlier. Plugged things in, checked connections, the usual drill.
Getting into the thick of it
Alright, setup done. Time for the actual ‘tuning and adjustment’. That’s what ‘tna aj’ stands for in my notes, anyway. Catchy, right? Not really.
I began with the first parameter. Tweaked it a bit. Watched the output. Not quite right. Tweaked it back, then a little more the other way. Still not hitting the sweet spot. This went on for a while. Parameter one, then parameter two, then fiddling with both together. It felt like trying to tune an old radio, lots of static.
- Checked setting A – no good.
- Adjusted setting B – response got worse.
- Tried a combination – slightly better, but unstable.
- Reset everything and started again.
Honestly, it got pretty frustrating. Reminded me of this one time, years ago, working on a project with completely garbage documentation. Spent weeks just trying to figure out how one specific module was supposed to interact with another. The manual said one thing, the code did another, and the actual results were something else entirely. Ended up having to reverse-engineer half the thing just to make basic progress. Management kept asking for updates, and I’m like, “I’m updating you that this thing is a mess!” They didn’t appreciate that.
Pushing Through
Anyway, back to this ‘tna aj’. I took a break, grabbed some coffee. Stared out the window for a bit. Sometimes you just need to step away, clear your head.

Came back with a slightly different idea. Instead of tweaking incrementally, I decided to try some more drastic jumps based on some rough calculations I scribbled down. Pushed setting C way up, pulled setting D way down. Watched it closely. Bingo! Things started behaving much more predictably. Not perfect, but way better than before.
Found a stable range, finally. It wasn’t exactly where I expected it to be based on the initial docs (docs again!), but it worked. From there, the fine-tuning was much easier. Small adjustments here and there, and I got it dialed in pretty nicely.
End Result
So, after a few hours of fiddling and one minor frustration detour down memory lane, the ‘tna aj’ is done. The system, or whatever you want to call it, is running smoothly now. Responding like it should.
It’s always satisfying when you wrestle with something and finally get it working. Even if it takes longer than planned and brings back memories of old project nightmares. Documented the final settings carefully this time. Don’t want to go through that guessing game again anytime soon.