fig
Village Idiot
Seems logical to have a look under the hood of these since this is a forum dedicated to the little beasties.
They come in various sizes and rail design, but most if not all are based on the same simple design, so let's have a peek!
Here is the underside with the backing removed and the spring-clips exposed, and one pulled out of a column.
You might also notice this thing is still sticky underneath and doubles as a lint brush...Ewwww!
Here's a closeup of the clip. Nothing really fancy, just creates a conductive plane for connections.
Here's the power rail; just a thin bridge connecting the clips together.
Most of the boards I've used have dovetail connectors so you can customize your playing field. The rails on some (like this one) are also removable and therefore configurable.
Yes, as a matter of fact I did pull this from the trash JUST for you!
Here is a spring-clip with a potentiometer leg shoved in it. You might be thinking, that's not so bad, it will spring back.
It's the plastic around the clip that suffers the most damage, allowing component legs. to wiggle, and also allowing more room for wear on the spring clip. The good news is, they are fairly inexpensive. Dedicate one for pots, or come up with a more elaborate solution like I've seen in other posts.
Thanks for reading!
They come in various sizes and rail design, but most if not all are based on the same simple design, so let's have a peek!
Here is the underside with the backing removed and the spring-clips exposed, and one pulled out of a column.
You might also notice this thing is still sticky underneath and doubles as a lint brush...Ewwww!

Here's a closeup of the clip. Nothing really fancy, just creates a conductive plane for connections.

Here's the power rail; just a thin bridge connecting the clips together.

Most of the boards I've used have dovetail connectors so you can customize your playing field. The rails on some (like this one) are also removable and therefore configurable.
Yes, as a matter of fact I did pull this from the trash JUST for you!

Here is a spring-clip with a potentiometer leg shoved in it. You might be thinking, that's not so bad, it will spring back.

It's the plastic around the clip that suffers the most damage, allowing component legs. to wiggle, and also allowing more room for wear on the spring clip. The good news is, they are fairly inexpensive. Dedicate one for pots, or come up with a more elaborate solution like I've seen in other posts.

Thanks for reading!
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