Electronics Terminal Block

par RDBRULZ

Fichiers imprimables (16)

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_1_pole_top.obj

    34 Ko · 933 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_1_pole_bottom.obj

    32 Ko · 924 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_2_pole_bottom.obj

    45 Ko · 935 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_8_pole_bottom.obj

    107 Ko · 936 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_7_pole_top.obj

    103 Ko · 930 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_3_pole_top.obj

    56 Ko · 937 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_3_pole_bottom.obj

    53 Ko · 925 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_4_pole_bottom.obj

    65 Ko · 929 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_5_pole_bottom.obj

    76 Ko · 924 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_8_pole_top.obj

    96 Ko · 929 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_6_pole_bottom.obj

    87 Ko · 923 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_4_pole_top.obj

    65 Ko · 925 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_6_pole_top.obj

    86 Ko · 933 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_2_pole_top.obj

    46 Ko · 935 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_7_pole_bottom.obj

    98 Ko · 925 téléchargements

  • obj

    Terminal_Block_5_pole_top.obj

    76 Ko · 921 téléchargements

Description

I was looking at ways to better manage my wiring for a new printer build and thought "Hey, some terminal blocks would be darn handy". I found a severe lack of decent ones on here so I decided to throw a snazzy one together right quick.

This handy dandy little terminal block comes in two pieces and 8 pre-made sizes. It's designed to work with standard m3 bolts and nuts. all that is required to assemble is a soldering iron and possibly a knife for cleaning up the edges.

Assembly instructions:

Print off both the top and bottom sections
.
Make sure the top can nest into the channels of the bottom.If your printer is over extruding or a little messy there could be a bit of shmoo to clean up with a knife.

Once it is nesting just fine use a soldering iron to press the m3 nuts into the premade slots of the bottom. Attach the top to the bottom and then use the end holes to screw it into whatever you like ( note, I'm not responsible for you screwing it into inappropriate things, or wiring something stupid heavy using these and burning your house/trailer/cat down)

There are options from 1 terminal up to 8 premade. There is also a sketchup file with each version and the building blocks to make your own. I figured 8 was a good ending point as it fit nicely on my current print bed.

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