Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
I read on Jeff Tranter's blog that he's used Krazy Glue on the sockets before. A couple dabs of that on the ends would probably hold the socket in very well and shouldn't be too hard to remove with some solvents. Assuming you don't melt the plastics.
Cat; the other white meat.
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
In this application Crazy Glue is more of a threat than a benefit, I'd say. Its low viscosity means it can wick its way inside the socket pin cavities, and that's very bad news indeed. Moreover I don't trust it to adhere well, given that the board you're attaching to is not entirely rigid -- there can be a bit of flexing during handling (such as chip extraction). When gluing onto something flexible, you want the glue itself to retain a degree of flexibility. Contact cement is good for this; likewise silicone adhesives such as RTV.
In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
https://laughtonelectronics.com/Arcana/ ... mmary.html
https://laughtonelectronics.com/Arcana/ ... mmary.html
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Sounds like a case for hot glue?
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Quote:
but I catch them long before I'm done, like noticing that there are already two wraps on a post that should only have one (where did the other one come from?)
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
I'm getting closer and closer to my first wire-wrapped computer. I've wrapped others but never got them far enough along for a real test.
I've taken my time on this one. Nothing is soldered to the board.
However, I doubt I will wire-wrap another computer in the future. I know all of the pros for a "properly" wrapped board but what I'm finding is that the closeness of the components are actually making it difficult for me to wrap. Mainly because of my vision. But also, because of a "blindness" effect from all of the pins and vias. It's kind of like snow blindness. When I look at the pins, I find it's hard to pinpoint the exact pin I need. Plus, pins that are closer than an inch apart are difficult for me.
I know this take practice.
Anyway, I should have a really neat computer finished pretty soon. ;-D
I've taken my time on this one. Nothing is soldered to the board.
However, I doubt I will wire-wrap another computer in the future. I know all of the pros for a "properly" wrapped board but what I'm finding is that the closeness of the components are actually making it difficult for me to wrap. Mainly because of my vision. But also, because of a "blindness" effect from all of the pins and vias. It's kind of like snow blindness. When I look at the pins, I find it's hard to pinpoint the exact pin I need. Plus, pins that are closer than an inch apart are difficult for me.
I know this take practice.
Anyway, I should have a really neat computer finished pretty soon. ;-D
Cat; the other white meat.
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EugeneNine
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Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Well back then we all couldn't afford a multi thousand dollar CAD program nor the high end workstation to run it on.
Now I can run kiCad on a 5 year old netbook on Monday and upload and have a PCB to me by Friday for less than the cost of a couple wire wrap socket. times have change a little bit. Part of me wants to WW another project but part of me says its just not cost effective anymore.
Now I can run kiCad on a 5 year old netbook on Monday and upload and have a PCB to me by Friday for less than the cost of a couple wire wrap socket. times have change a little bit. Part of me wants to WW another project but part of me says its just not cost effective anymore.
- BigDumbDinosaur
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Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
EugeneNine wrote:
Part of me wants to WW another project but part of me says its just not cost effective anymore.
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
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Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Bregalad wrote:
Quote:
but I catch them long before I'm done, like noticing that there are already two wraps on a post that should only have one (where did the other one come from?)
EugeneNine wrote:
Well back then we all couldn't afford a multi thousand dollar CAD program nor the high end workstation to run it on.
Quote:
Now I can run kiCad on a 5 year old netbook on Monday and upload and have a PCB to me by Friday for less than the cost of a couple wire wrap socket.
http://WilsonMinesCo.com/ lots of 6502 resources
The "second front page" is http://wilsonminesco.com/links.html .
What's an additional VIA among friends, anyhow?
The "second front page" is http://wilsonminesco.com/links.html .
What's an additional VIA among friends, anyhow?
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
GARTHWILSON wrote:
Sometimes I'm torn between the two.
Connections of a tentative or experimental nature would be made using WW, whereas connections unlikely to become subject to revision would be implemented via the etched traces. Typically these would include the Vcc and Gnd connections (and their bypass caps) and probably also the data and address buses.
And the divisions needn't be cast in stone. You might choose to use WW for a few of the non-experimental connections simply to increase density (as if you had more PCB layers than actually exist). On the flip side of the coin, if you initially used an etched trace for a given connection but later decided it needed to be modified, just cut the etched trace and install an alternative connection using WW.
In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
https://laughtonelectronics.com/Arcana/ ... mmary.html
https://laughtonelectronics.com/Arcana/ ... mmary.html
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EugeneNine
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 01 Nov 2016
Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Or build a backplane based with card slots spaced wide enough you can use WW boards and then do soldered boards in some slots as well. If you make it modular enough.
I'm getting ahead of myself though, I'm at the point where I need to be able to burn roms.
I'm getting ahead of myself though, I'm at the point where I need to be able to burn roms.
- BigDumbDinosaur
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- Location: Midwestern USA (JB Pritzker’s dystopia)
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Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
EugeneNine wrote:
Or build a backplane based with card slots spaced wide enough you can use WW boards and then do soldered boards in some slots as well. If you make it modular enough.
A "mezzanine" configuration, used by several of us to attach boards, tends to reduce the problem of transmission line effects and usually demonstrates better stability at higher clock rates. However, mezzanine construction may be less convenient for experimentation.
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
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EugeneNine
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Re: Revolutionary no-solder wire-wrapping breakthrough!
Yea, there is that issue too 
Most anything I build tends to be smaller and portable anyway as I don't have any kind of bench space.
Most anything I build tends to be smaller and portable anyway as I don't have any kind of bench space.