A list of puns related to "Printed Wiring Board"
With experience in designing circuit boards for the down-hole tool testing side. Apply Today (Via Inbox ) Note: Complete Job Title. (Printed Wiring Board Assembly (PWA) eDFM Technician)
Does anyone have the wiring diagram/board layout and or diagram for the pin outs for the CR10s board? Would be appreciated!
We just moved into a new house (built 2005), and are trying to create ethernet connections for every room.
Good news is there are cat 5e wall panels everywhere, but the bad news is I can't get them to work. Apparently, the prewired ethernet is only for voice because they are connected to a 1x9 bridged telephone board.
There are a few threads on this subreddit regarding this topic, and I have educated myself with them. Best practice is getting a patch panel and a switch, slightly worse practice is ending the ethernet wires with RJ45s and connect them directly to a switch, and worst practice is connecting two ethernet wires together if I am only interested in getting one wall panel working. Please correct me if I am wrong.
My project is all set, but I am now blocked by the labels. After reading really hard, I can make out 1: master, 2: front right, 3: front left, 4: family, and 6: kitchen. I can't read what exactly 5 is.
https://preview.redd.it/ezhk11s416881.jpg?width=940&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=4839c60b51782fe674e429bc7f2d0156a67389c7
I just bought an ecobee 3 lite and I need help wiring up the PEK adaptor. Below there will be three images. A picture of my wiring (it is kinda hard to see what is going), a Diagram I drew of what is going on, and a diagram to see if I am connecting it right.
I watched a video on YouTube and someone showed how to do it if you have just wiring and no board, but in his video he only had one cable coming back from the ac unit. I have two. and that is where I am confused. I need help with that second wire. I added a question mark, am I connecting it right?
I followed each cable and I drew it out so you can see what is happening easier
I'm about to start assembly on my first non-PCB-based keyboard, a Dactyl Manuform. When playing with the case and switches, I noticed that because of the iffy, mostly-friction nature of the 3D-printed switch holes, trying to pull a keycap would also pull the switch out of the case. Once wired up with diode chains and speaker wire, I could easily see this doing significant damage to the wiring matrix.
I've thought of the following approaches:
None of these sounds great. This seems like a problem that literally everyone with a 3D-printed ergo keyboard must have wrangled with -- what option am I missing?
This of course is more for people who have actually bought it π I'm just looking into buying 3d printed and painted parts (I can't paint for the life of me) to make the game more "physical". However, to say the price of this physical representation is way over the price of the base game would be an understatement.
Long story short, I'm willing to buy them because I think it'd be awesome to set up actual floor tiles and walls and doors and everything to get the characters through. But is it worth it? For people who thought the same thing, how often do you actually use the 3d printed pieces vs just the cardboard pieces? And if you could go back in time and unbuy it, would you buy it again? Or save your money for other board game things?
Thanks for your input π
So I've been playing with chips and whatnot using breadboards and I think I'm ready to up my game a little, but I'm in a weird little spot in which I don't wanna buy PCBs and wanna build everything from veroboards, stripboards and maybe etching my own circuit boards.
This might be a little extreme for a subset of the DIY community, but was wondering how could I find more stuff on this area.
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