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#1
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I just had the "pleasant experience" of having a ribbon conductor break
in some 1997 vintage ham equipment. It is a ~16 conductor ribbon cable ~1/2" wide which looks a lot like Kapton only it has white insulation, possibly epoxy. On one end the conductors are factory stripped and plug directly into a latching receptacle. The other end, where the breakage occurred was factory stripped and soldered to the surface of the circuit board. After much angst, heat and scraping I was able to strip the end of the conductor and resolder to the circuit board. I have to say, my job doesn't look too bad, but I had to start over once. It burns easily in a flame, but is hard to melt with soldering iron. Can someone advise how this stuff is stripped in the factory without nicking the conductors? Can it be bought in factory made lengths as opposed to bulk? -- Joe Leikhim K4SAT "The RFI-EMI-GUY" The Lost Deep Thoughts By: Jack Handey Before a mad scientist goes mad, there's probably a time when he's only partially mad. And this is the time when he's going to throw his best parties. |
#2
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Can someone advise how this stuff is stripped in the factory without
nicking the conductors? It's a small machine that usually has a long V-shaped blade that comes down to slice into the insulation from both sides while the rest of the cable is held firmly by blocks. The cut is made, e.g., 1/4" back from the end of the cable, and merely pulling on the remaining cable is enough to free the long end. At least that's the way the one I've used worked; it was semi-automatic (you had to manually position and pull the cable -- the slicing action was done from pneumatically powered pistons). There were numerous set screw adjustments to get the spacing of everything just right, but once it was set up, it tended to stay in alginment for a long time. I'm sure the thing costs thousands of dollars. Can it be bought in factory made lengths as opposed to bulk? Yes, even DigiKey will sell you small quantities of pre-stripped cable at very reasonable prices (well, spendy compared to having your own machine around, but cheap compared to having to do it by hand). ---Joel Kolstad |
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