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09-08-2009 #1
Managed to grab myself a little bargain tonight, its not much but i did pay about £10 for the first one direct from routout.
Why do i want it ? well i just thought it would be handy to have spare, should i need to expand !
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...m=220461410259
£3.45 all in, THAT WILL DO ME !
If its any intrest to anyone he's got a few...scrap that they have ended !Last edited by Lee Roberts; 01-04-2012 at 01:24 AM.
.Me
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09-08-2009 #2
Why do they insist on calling these breakout boards when they are connection boards.
A breakout board BREAKS the connection between the computer and system by either opto's or buffers to form a protection.
These connector strips do neither.
Mind you I must admit they have a use as we have two of these daisy chained back to back so we can put a scope onto the parallel cable on any connector without having to hack a cable or wiring about.
.John S -
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10-08-2009 #3Visit Us: www.automationshop.co.uk
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10-08-2009 #4
Having a quick look on the web shows that breakout boards fall into 2 camps active ones and passive ones. The active ones will give an electrically isolated input/output whilst the passive just allow connections to be made between cables and plugs I think the later is the most common for the use as johnS has used.
Peter
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10-08-2009 #5
It's probably all about semantics
The active ones are breakout boards, the passive ones are connector strips.
Given the cost of some of the cheaper ones, Roy's at DIY-CNC start at about £13 ? it's false economy to skimp on an item like this.
I know many are on tight budgets but one of the most important things a decent breakout board does is to amplify the PP signal to a genuine 5 volts.
Many modern computers, laptops etc run at 3.3 volts on the PP and many of the modern drivers like the Leadshine drives that Gary and ARC sell require 5 volts at the opto's to work.
Sometime they do work, just, off 3.3 volts but it's that borderline that you don't realise, and have problems that's hard to trace further down the line.
.John S -
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10-08-2009 #6
I agree John, but Roy's PCPPS-2 (£14.5 as a kit inc P&P) or PCPPS-3 (£17.50 ditto) don't buffer the signals.
You have to go to the PBB20 (£25.50 as a kit inc P&P) or Uniport (£39 as a kit inc P&P) for that... still not a lot of money really, but then you might as well go for the OptoBoard (£41 as a kit inc P&P) and get the benefits for not much more...Last edited by irving2008; 10-08-2009 at 11:27 AM. Reason: spelling!
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10-08-2009 #7
When i think connector strips John i think of one of these:
.Me
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10-08-2009 #8
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14-08-2009 #9
Why do I get the idea that someone is extracting the Michael?
Templecorran
Where the Light was kept during the Dark Ages
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14-08-2009 #10
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