[sdiy] Prototyping breadboard?
Jeff Farr
moogah at gmail.com
Mon Oct 17 19:24:44 CEST 2005
Do an ebay search for "Global Specialties 503" or "203". They are both proto
boards that regularly sell for a fraction of their 300$ list price.
On 10/17/05, Tim Daugard <daugard at sprintmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Cole Groff" <chonald at gmail.com>
> >
> > Do any of you guys recommend a solderless powered prototyping
> > breadboard out there?
> >
> http://www.geofex.com/FX_images/protofx6.gif
>
> This picture reminded me. For an early use, I had soldered header
> pins to a 9V battery snap this means If I wanted to do a circuit
> powered from a 9V battery, I could just plug the battery into the
> power bus (or into two rows) to use as power. I alos have a set with
> three pins and two battery snapd for bi-polar power.
>
> I kept a weak battery around so that I could see what happens when
> the battery runs down.
>
>
> If you mount the far as backing the plastic proto boards on
> something, make sure it win't flrs. I had one of the expensive RS
> ones they sold mounted on a metal plate. The adhesive they used
> pulled the backing off and the pins out when the metal flexed and
> bent. If you DIY use something that wont flex.
>
> Tim Daugard
> AG4GZ 30.4078N 86.6227W Alt: 12 feet above MSL
> http://home.sprintmail.com/~daugard/synth.htm
>
> Still playing with an 1802 computer (and hurricane repairs, and
> remodeling.) I'm almost ready to use the 1802 to control a PROM
> programmer I'm building so that I can use newer processors so that I
> can build a wave table. I STILL PREFER ANALOG.
>
>
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