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Mad Scientist Jr wrote: I am looking for a way to make certain components (such as pots & trimmers, 1/4" phono jacks, switches, or other sub-circuits) "plug and play" for various prototypes + experiments. Similar to the breadboard concept but more permanent. Headers like those found on computer motherboards for connecting power LEDs are small enough where the leads match the components I'm using and the pins on the motherboard are just the right size to plug into a solderless breadboard, but are more durable than breadboard jumper wires. Rick suggested "daisy chain jumper wire" (see below for a description) and I did some searching on various sites, but no luck. Can anyone say what else this might be listed under or where it might be found? Newsgroups: alt.comp.hardware.homebuilt,sci.electronics.misc, rec.radio.amateur.homebrew From: Rick Frazier Date: Wed, 30 May 2007 17:34:56 -1000 Local: Wed, May 30 2007 11:34 pm Subject: motherboard LED connectors and posts? I think you might be looking for something that was called "daisy chain jumper wire" way back in my wire-wrap days. It came as a spool of flexible, stranded insulated wire about 24 guage or so, with an insulated single pin socket every 5 inches or so. You just counted off the number of jumpers you wanted to interconnect, and snip them off of the roll. The sockets fit over standard .025" square posts quite nicely and allowed testing minor modifications without wrapping on new wires. They had a multitude of uses. I still have some leds and other things with single 5" wires attached to each leg (each with it's own socket at the end). I haven't even looked for this stuff for years, and know I hava a half roll tucked away in a box somewhere. If I could only find it I'd at least have a part number and manufacturer to provide. I'll see if I can dig it out sometime in the next couple of days... Good Luck --Rick As I remember, it was from one of those "if you have to ask the price, you probably can't afford it" breadboard manufacturers. Augat, or Cambion, or the like. Dig, Dig, Dig. Ah, no. It was Berg (part of DuPont). In an old (1994) Newark catalog I keep for reference, it's "Daisy Chain Jumpers", $215.72 for a chain of 250, either 2.5 or 5 inch spacing. We used the same crimp terminals at a place I worked at in the '80s. The hand crimp tool cost about $900. The contact is self contained and doesn't need any plastic shell to make the contact spring action work. So the terminals can fit into a shell (like we used them), or work by themselves, insulated with shrink tubing. But things aren't that bad, now. They use(/used?) very similar crimp terminals in the header connectors for PCs, like the plug to hook the reset button or speaker to the mother board. Jameco sells this stuff as ".100" Non-Polarized Connector Housings and Crimp Pins". IMHO, try part 100766. Page 155 in the May 2007 catalog. 12 cents a terminal and the crimper is only $10.95. Add a little bit of wire and shrink tube. What a difference 25 years makes... Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
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