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Lesson chaos wiring?

Discussion in 'Electronic and hardware generally' started by Pit, Feb 7, 2015.

  1. Pit

    Pit - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Gold Contributor

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    My Motion Simulator:
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    If YOU think, you have all under control, in this case you can miss this thread. If your wiring looks like the picture below:
    Chaos under control.jpg
    you should have this:
    breadboard.jpg
    or this:
    mini_breadboard.jpg
    or this:
    raspberry_pi_breadboard.jpg
    If YOU do not know, what it is - it is called a

    BREADBOARD

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breadboard

    Happy building!
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  2. bsft

    bsft

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    OCD, OCD OCD!!!!!
    (obsessive compulsive disorder)
    :grin
  3. fzxj520

    fzxj520 Active Member

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    Good idea! Already on my shopping list :cheers
  4. christian

    christian Member

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  5. RacingMat

    RacingMat Well-Known Member Gold Contributor

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  6. xStouf

    xStouf New Member

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    What a nice wiring, very clear and so easy to sort :D
    Now, find this short !
  7. Ben V

    Ben V Member

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    As a professional Electrician, I've become a big fan of a product we call wire ducting. It's available in a wide variety of colors and sizes to suit the job at hand.
    ABB-Q-Duct.jpg

    Most wires can just be routed out the slots already in the sides. For larger wire sizes, the "tabs" can be snapped off quite easily if you flex them to the outside. I usually leave a little bit of extra wire in a zig-zag shape inside the ducting, so if you want to move a wire to a different terminal later on, you don't have to extend or shorten it.

    Here are a couple examples of panels I've done with wire ducting:

    20150220_123216.jpg 20150313_165726.jpg
    PLCs in a control cabinet.

    20150109_122222.jpg 20140904_125622.jpg
    12V & 120V Marine style breaker panel interconnects
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  8. xStouf

    xStouf New Member

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    This is very usefull, thank you for the tip !
  9. Alexey

    Alexey Well-Known Member

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    [​IMG]

    Neat, cheap, effective.

    Self adhesive sticky tie bases and cable ties.
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  10. Gabriel Vuelma Romanzini

    Gabriel Vuelma Romanzini Member

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  11. Gabriel Vuelma Romanzini

    Gabriel Vuelma Romanzini Member

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  12. tombo

    tombo Active Member

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    For my finished cables I always use this
    [​IMG]

    I don't know the name. But it's wrapped around cables in automobiles and it gives a very good look.

    Here is a picture of two cables I made with this. (make shure to inlarge so you can zoom in ;))
    IMG_3633.jpg

    For me the Breadboard didn't help to reduce the wiremess :p
    2015-06-27 12.17.07.jpg
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    Last edited: Jul 28, 2015
  13. Gabriel Vuelma Romanzini

    Gabriel Vuelma Romanzini Member

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    Other simple tip that almost all already know is to use:

    [​IMG]

    That Helps a lot :)

    And if you don't have it you can pass a insulating tape around the wires...

    To isolate you can also use Heat Shrink tubing:

    [​IMG]
    • Useful Useful x 1
  14. Oz_gadget

    Oz_gadget New Member

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    I spent many years in data centres doing cable management on server racks
    always preferred building a rack myself 'greenfield' rather than working on trying to unf@#k someone elses catastrophe, some of the most otherwise diligent and intelligent sysadmins would somehow lose all common sense when physically racking a server...

    I always staged any cabling with double-sided velcro tape, similar to this stuff
    https://www.aliexpress.com/item/400...chweb0_0,searchweb201602_6,searchweb201603_52
    it comes in a range of widths, 2"/50mm, 1"/25mm or even narrower ~10mm & 5mm
    the smaller stuff is great for doing thinner cables and small runs.
    the wider stuff will obviously hold together better and helps keep a linear direction as well
    its more expensive than buying cable ties, but cheaper in the long run as you can reuse.

    this stuff is excellent for staging/preparing your cable runs, flexible in allowing quick changing of runs and robust enough to leave in place once finalised.
    • Like Like x 1
  15. dododge

    dododge Active Member Gold Contributor

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    For bundling cables I'm a big fan of "Flexo F6". Pretty much the only downside is that you have to heat-seal any cuts you make to keep them from fraying. A hot knife makes that easy if you've got one handy, and I've managed to use a lighter as well.



    The bundles can then be strapped down with velcro ties as needed.

    [​IMG]
    • Like Like x 1