Can you find PCB mount connectors for all the connector types you use? If so make a little PCB with the two or more connector types on it and the correct wiring in between. Fisrt, though, find a box that will fit the board and connectors, nibble out holes and you've got a professional looking adaptor. Basically, an adaptor box. Easy as pie. Or for stationary equipment, you can build a connector panel. Lots of options. Of course, there is no substitute for having the right connector on the main PCB in the first place. --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Dale Mosby" <dale@a...> wrote: > > I have made some boards using the toner transfer method with fairly > good results. Something closely related is the matter of getting > cables connected to a printed circuit board. I would very much like to > hear of good ways to build nice cables and connectors that are "clean" > and approach the looks and durability of commecial cables. > > I work with amateur (ham) radio and many of the new radios use RJ45 > plugs for the microphone. I do have a good crimp tool for RJ45 use and > make my own cables for home networking. I have constructed a couple > cables to connect to such radios, ending up with a short stub of cat 5 > wire coming from the RJ45 plug then converting to some shielded wire > for audio and flexible cable for the other signals. I end up with > something that works, but is nowhere near as nice as the commercial > cable. > > I suspect that there must be some injecting molding machine (at a cost > of a few million, no doubt) that creates all these nice cables that > come with commercial equipment. My current solder and heat-shrink > methods don't approach the quality of my PC boards and seem the "weak > link" in the homwbrew process. > > What solutions have others found for nice cables & connectors?
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Re: Cables and connectors
2005-01-19 by Phil
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