Difference between revisions of "PBB 272"

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* 110VAC Input Power, ± 10%
 
* 110VAC Input Power, ± 10%
  
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== Use ==
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=== Breadboards ===
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There are a total of eight different breadboards on the PBB 272 - 5 distribution strips and 3 terminal strips. 
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==== Distribution Strips ====
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The distribution strips are the thin boards that have a blue strips on one side and a red stripe on the other.  On an single distribution strip, all pins on the blue side are connected together and all pins on the red side are connected together.  Note, however, that red and blue are not connected and also that red on one strip is not connected to red on any other strip.  The distribution strips therefore provide 10 independent sets of 50 pins each.  These are primarily used for ground, voltage sources, or common points within circuits.
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==== Terminal Strips ====
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The terminal strips are the wider breadboards running vertically in the center of the PBB 272.  The rows of these are numbered every 5 rows and each column is labeled.  On these boards, groups of five pins in half-rows are connected together.  For example, at the top left of the left terminal strip, pins F63, G63, H64, I63, and J63 are connected together.  They are '''not''' connected to A-E63 in that terminal strip, nor are they connected to F-J63 on either of the two other terminal strips.  This means there are 378 (63 rows per column * 2 columns per board * 3 terminal boards)independent groups of 5 pins each.  These are useful for making connections within a circuit that require between 2 and 5 total connections.  If more are needed, groups can be connected by a "jumper" (basically, a wire) that will link a total of ten pins together.
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 +
==== Pin Addressing ====
 +
The PBB 272's in B209 have an "interesting feature" - the boards were seemingly installed upside-down such that "row 1" is on the bottom and "column A" is at the far right of a board.  Unfortunately, it requires removing on the order of 24 machine-tightened screws to reorient the breadboards so...they have remained upside-down. 
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 +
For the distribution strips, pin addresses are generally given first as a combination of which color and which distribution strip to use. To determine which strip, the top one is called "top" which the other four are numbered 1-4 from left to right.  For location, a general area to connect a wire is needed.  As an example, '''Blue 2-21''' means to use the blue side of the second vertical distribution strip and specifically a pin location close to the 21st row (using the numbers from the nearest terminal strip).  Since all the blue pins in a column are connected, distribution strip rows do not need to be exact.
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For the terminal strips, pin addresses are generally given first as an indicator of which column to use (numbered 1-6 going left to right), followed by a lettered column and a numbered row.  As an example, '''Col 4-E20''' would be in the fourth half-row in the E column and the 20th row.  As a point of reference, this particular E column is a little to the right of the ground plug at the top of the PBB 272.
  
  

Revision as of 18:00, 21 January 2009

The PBB 272 is a powered breadboard. Currently, there are 20 of these in B209 Fitzpatrick for use with EGR 119 and ECE 141.

PBB 272

Specifications

The following list taken from Circuit Specialists[1]

  • 5 Distribution Strips (500 tie points)
  • 3 Terminal Strips (1890 tie points)
  • 4 Binding Posts
  • One Ground
  • One 5VDC (1 AMP) Constant Power
  • One 0 to +15VDC (500mA) Variable Power
  • One 0 to -15VDC (500mA) Variable Power
  • 110VAC Input Power, ± 10%

Use

Breadboards

There are a total of eight different breadboards on the PBB 272 - 5 distribution strips and 3 terminal strips.

Distribution Strips

The distribution strips are the thin boards that have a blue strips on one side and a red stripe on the other. On an single distribution strip, all pins on the blue side are connected together and all pins on the red side are connected together. Note, however, that red and blue are not connected and also that red on one strip is not connected to red on any other strip. The distribution strips therefore provide 10 independent sets of 50 pins each. These are primarily used for ground, voltage sources, or common points within circuits.

Terminal Strips

The terminal strips are the wider breadboards running vertically in the center of the PBB 272. The rows of these are numbered every 5 rows and each column is labeled. On these boards, groups of five pins in half-rows are connected together. For example, at the top left of the left terminal strip, pins F63, G63, H64, I63, and J63 are connected together. They are not connected to A-E63 in that terminal strip, nor are they connected to F-J63 on either of the two other terminal strips. This means there are 378 (63 rows per column * 2 columns per board * 3 terminal boards)independent groups of 5 pins each. These are useful for making connections within a circuit that require between 2 and 5 total connections. If more are needed, groups can be connected by a "jumper" (basically, a wire) that will link a total of ten pins together.

Pin Addressing

The PBB 272's in B209 have an "interesting feature" - the boards were seemingly installed upside-down such that "row 1" is on the bottom and "column A" is at the far right of a board. Unfortunately, it requires removing on the order of 24 machine-tightened screws to reorient the breadboards so...they have remained upside-down.

For the distribution strips, pin addresses are generally given first as a combination of which color and which distribution strip to use. To determine which strip, the top one is called "top" which the other four are numbered 1-4 from left to right. For location, a general area to connect a wire is needed. As an example, Blue 2-21 means to use the blue side of the second vertical distribution strip and specifically a pin location close to the 21st row (using the numbers from the nearest terminal strip). Since all the blue pins in a column are connected, distribution strip rows do not need to be exact.

For the terminal strips, pin addresses are generally given first as an indicator of which column to use (numbered 1-6 going left to right), followed by a lettered column and a numbered row. As an example, Col 4-E20 would be in the fourth half-row in the E column and the 20th row. As a point of reference, this particular E column is a little to the right of the ground plug at the top of the PBB 272.


Questions

Post your questions by editing the discussion page of this article. Edit the page, then scroll to the bottom and add a question by putting in the characters *{{Q}}, followed by your question and finally your signature (with four tildes, i.e. ~~~~). Using the {{Q}} will automatically put the page in the category of pages with questions - other editors hoping to help out can then go to that category page to see where the questions are. See the page for Template:Q for details and examples.

External Links

References

  1. Powered Breadboard w/ LCD Voltage Displays (PBB-272A), Circuit Specialists. Note: the breadboards in the lab are PBB 272, which are the same as the 272A but without the LCD displays.