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On Jan 7, 1:47*pm, "Ross, NS7F" wrote:
Has anybody had any experience with those little cables used for connections on computer motherboards, typically to front panel LEDs, etc? The pins are 0.1" centered and would be extremely handy for routing +12v around while breadboarding stuff. I think the official name is IDT cables. However, whenever I search for them, I get the crimpers for the massive 40 or 80-conductor cables for ATA ribbons! I just want to make the little 2-3 conductor thingies... Ross - There are 0.1" dual-row headers that use 0.05" spacing ribbon cables, and the connectors crimp on. These are "IDC" or "Insulation Displacement Connectors". You can assemble these with a little vise quite reliably. You don't often see these below 10 conductors, and I don't think this is what you are asking about because you want the connectors for 2 or 3 or 4 wires. But you'd be surprised how quickly you need an extra conductor here and there and pretty soon end up at 10. And they are so cheap and so reliably assembled that even though you don't need 10 conductors, you might want to use them anyway. As long as you line up the polarizing stripe on the cable with the socket, these are very reliably and very quickly assembled using nothing more than a vise. There are also single-row headers as well as dual-row headers that use housings and discrete wires. These are "rectangular" connectors, and I think this is what you want. The board side is called a "header" and the wire side has a "housing" which holds the contacts. The contacts are crimped onto the wires and there are different contacts for different size wires. There are some specialized versions of these for terminating miniature coax. There are many manufacturers of housings and pins/sockets and crimpers and usually it's best to make sure that you are using all the matching stuff. Molex and AMP are the names to see in the catalogs. A "production" crimper can set you back many hundred dollars but a "prototype" crimper for $10-$20 is what you want. If you use a crimper that does not match the contact, the first time you tug on the wire the contact will stay in the housing and the wire will slide right out of the contact. So make sure you order matching crimper and housing and contacts. It's real boring to terminate more than just onesy-twosy wires using the handheld crimpers. That's why the "IDC" versions for ribbon cable are so popular. Even though you're not asking for the IDC/ribbon cable versions, if I were you I'd seriously consider using them even though you don't think you need so many contacts. There are also IDC versions of these single-row connectors for discrete wire termination. They only work reliably for very narrow wire ranges, and if you aren't working with exactly matching wires I'd advise that you stay away from them. Tim N3QE |
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