| Electronics > Beginners |
| Breadboard from Aliexpress with banana plugs |
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| ergya:
Hi Everyone, I bougth a (let's just say) relatively cheap large breadboard with "external plugs" from AliExpress and I have a question. I took a picture: --- End quote --- from the back of the panel because I surprised that the back of the plugs are actually not covered (insulated). Is this normal (speaking of for example an "expensive" breadboard)? Especially because according to the package it can "whitstand" 300V/3-5A :-DD. I am just curious I will never let this much voltage/current through the breadboard but are there breadboards (let's assume not from China) which can indeed allow this much voltage/current flow trough it? |
| tooki:
I don’t doubt that the binding post/banana jack can handle that. But I certainly wouldn’t do it when installed into the metal baseplate of the breadboard!!! :p As an aside, maybe someone can explain to me what good such binding posts are on a breadboard. How do you guys use them? I’ve not found them to be especially helpful, since they’re not wired to anything on the breadboard itself. Do you just run a jumper from the binding post to a power rail? (I’ve done that and it’s just rarely as practical as the banana-to-male-jumper cables I built.) |
| Nusa:
There's no one right way, but the most common is probably to install wire jumpers from the binding posts to breadboard power rails, then to use banana cords between the binding posts and the lab power supply or supplies. Which makes it easier to disconnect and put aside when you need the lab supply for something else. |
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