It may be worthwhile noting that this sort of perfboard is quite alien this Eastern side of the Atlantic... Or maybe it's just th culture of the environment I started out in, who knows, as after nearly 40 years in electronics the first time I encountered it was a few years back when I was sent a new Raspberry Pi "proto plate" from Adafruit which had (to me) a most odd arrangement of pads and tracks.
Where I was, if you wanted to prototype something, or even build something more permanent than on a breadboard, using veroboard (stripboard) was the done-thing.
And a quick search (on RS and Farnell), doesn't find any either (or I just don't know the right name for it) - plenty of stripboard (or Veroboard as a generic name as they're a popular manufacturer of it) which is what I was brought up on - which is what I recently built up my little 6502 project on, because, why not?
The last wire-wrap 6502 I did was on RS part number: 435-434 - still being sold today:
https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/eurocards/0435434/ and I'd have bought it, (and soldered wires to it, having lost all my wire-wrap kit years ago), if it weren't for the cost.
I remember lots of magazine articles too (Everyday electronics, Practical Electronics, etc.) all using stripboard too - giving the track break patterns on one side, components on the other - even Fritzing now has a stripboard layout...
So maybe this is another European/US difference in the prototype electronics department - any insight to stripboard use in the US?
6502 on stripboard:
https://unicorn.drogon.net/ruby-03.jpgCheers,
-Gordon
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Gordon Henderson.
See my
Ruby 6502 and 65816 SBC projects here:
https://projects.drogon.net/ruby/