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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!torn!utzoo!censor!isgtec!bmw
- From: bmw@isgtec.com (Bruce M. Walker)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: Vector wire pencils
- Summary: there's better.
- Message-ID: <3910@isgtec.isgtec.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 21:33:52 GMT
- References: <1992Dec21.152708.11873@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- Sender: news@isgtec.com
- Organization: ISG Technologies Inc., Mississauga Ontario
- Lines: 62
-
- In article <1992Dec21.152708.11873@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov> stephens@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov (mark stephens) writes:
- > Are these useful?
-
- Yes. But not as useful as wire-wrap or Slit-N-Wrap.
-
- > They are the "pencils" which wrap a wire around a post
- > and you then solder it. [...] Etching seems to be a tad
- > much for (probably) one shot boards and wire wrapping might be overkill.
-
- For one-shot boards (largely for ICs), I've used:
- - hand etched PC boards using India ink (hand-drawn on!) for resist
- - hand etched PC boards using photo resist
- - hand etched PC boards using silk-screened ink resist (from photo)
- - Vector wiring pencil (P178-1)
- - Vector Slit-N-Wrap pencil (P180)
- - wire-wrap (tm Gardner Denver :-)
-
- For reliability, I prefer wire-wrap 1st, then Slit-N-Wrap. The wiring
- pencil is well down the list.
-
- I found that the wiring pencil was useful for a very compact board, but
- you have to be very careful not to melt (a) the socket (b) too much
- insulation along the wire. The docs say "use a 750 degree tip" and
- they mean it. I used an 800 degree tip on my Weller temperature
- controlled iron. This is a bit silly: buy a $5 tool and you need to
- use a $100 soldering iron with it. It can be made to work though,
- I built a complete CMOS microcomputer with it.
-
- > With the pencil, do you need special posts for inserting into a perf
- > board?
-
- I always used solder-tail sockets that I epoxy'd down. Alternatively,
- I would scotch-tape the sockets in place, turn the board over and
- solder all the Vcc and GND pins and remove the tape. You can wire
- directly to cut-off and bent component pins (resistors, etc).
-
- But I'd forget all that.
-
- I'd recommend a simple and cheap hand-wire-wrap tool if you just
- have a small board (up to 25 ICs) to do. These look like this:
-
- ____________
- ============|_____O______|=========
-
- ^ ^ ^
- | | |
- wrapping end stripper unwrapping end
-
- (sorry about the ASCII pix)
-
- ... and take 30 gauge wire, and cost about $7 or so. All the tools you
- need are: the above, a small side cutter (4"), needle-nose pliers (5")
- and it's helpful to have a very small crochet hook to snag wires and
- shove them around. The cutters and pliers should be spring-opening if
- you can get 'em.
-
- Have fun!
-
- --
- "Eventually, I decided that thinking was not getting me very far and it
- was time to try building." -- Rob Pike, The Text Editor sam
- bmw@isgtec.com [ ...!uunet.ca!isgtec!bmw ] Bruce Walker
-