Has anyone got any insight or better yet stuff they've used before and can just point me at a matched set?
Cheers
Connor
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I need removable ones. I also need to know what ribbon the plugs take.
A common connector is 2.54mm pitch (0.1") dual row connectors. Sockets (which crimps onto cables) and pins which solder to PCBs. An example of this would be the pinheaders as you find on a Raspberry Pi
This matches 1.27mm pitch ribbon cable
This is quite a large connector size but relatively easy to handle
there are finer pitch connectors around but maybe not so easy to incorporate into a homemade PCB.
Either way I think you are going to have to make the cables up for the lengths you require and the 0.1" connector type is probably easier for that
60 or 30 pin is not so common but 20 and 40 is so maybe you could combine them to get your 60 way connection.
There is probably a better way to do this though by digitising the channels and sending them over some kind of serial bus that only takes a few wires.
Somebody can probably advise on this but you would need to define the kind of data you were trying to get across.
Another reason to go down the digitising route may be you might run into signal loss or interference running over such long cable lengths, again depending on the type of signal you are trying to send across.
Glen
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On 22/03/2018, 03:06 'cprich22' via North East Makers <north-east-makers@googlegroups.com> wrote:
I need removable ones. I also need to know what ribbon the plugs take.
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maybe you could find something here?seems that IDC sockets are meant to be standard.Though I don't know how well they will run over 4m.Cheers,Brian
On Thu, Mar 22, 2018 at 7:16 AM, Glen Beestone <gl...@technologist.com> wrote:
A common connector is 2.54mm pitch (0.1") dual row connectors. Sockets (which crimps onto cables) and pins which solder to PCBs. An example of this would be the pinheaders as you find on a Raspberry Pi
This matches 1.27mm pitch ribbon cable
This is quite a large connector size but relatively easy to handle
there are finer pitch connectors around but maybe not so easy to incorporate into a homemade PCB.
Either way I think you are going to have to make the cables up for the lengths you require and the 0.1" connector type is probably easier for that
60 or 30 pin is not so common but 20 and 40 is so maybe you could combine them to get your 60 way connection.
There is probably a better way to do this though by digitising the channels and sending them over some kind of serial bus that only takes a few wires.
Somebody can probably advise on this but you would need to define the kind of data you were trying to get across.
Another reason to go down the digitising route may be you might run into signal loss or interference running over such long cable lengths, again depending on the type of signal you are trying to send across.
Glen
--
Sent from my Android phone with mail.com Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
On 22/03/2018, 03:06 'cprich22' via North East Makers <north-ea...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
I need removable ones. I also need to know what ribbon the plugs take.
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Brian Deggertwitter: @drbrian----------------------------------------
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The signals are literally just closed contacts
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I'm going to have to sound a bit concerned here....
If it's genuinely, like ACTUALLY, safety critical, two arduinos are not the way to do is :-SDavid
On Fri, Mar 23, 2018 at 4:30 AM, 'cprich22' via North East Makers <north-ea...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
The signals are literally just closed contacts
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