ELEC 241 Lab

The Breadboard

The Concept

When building a "permanent circuit" the components can be "grown" together (as in an integrated circuit), soldered together (as on a printed circuit board), or held together by screws and clamps (as in house wiring). In lab, we want something that is easy to assemble and easy to change. We also want something that can be used with the same components that "real" circuits use. Most of these components have pieces of wire or metal tabs sticking out of them to form their terminals.

How it Works

The heart of the solderless breadboard is a small metal clip that looks like this:

The clip is made of nickel silver (which like mock turtle soup, contains no silver), a material which is reasonably conductive, reasonably springy, and reasonably corrosion resistant. Because each of the pairs of fingers is independent (like the coils of a Beautyrest® mattress) we can insert the end of a wire between any pair without reducing the tension in any of the other fingers. Hence each pair can hold a wire with maximum tension.

To make a breadboard, an array of these clips is embedded in a plastic block which holds them in place and insulates them from each other, like this:

The hole in the block above each pair of fingers holds the wire accurately centered in the clip.

Depending on the size and arrangement of the clips, we get either a socket strip or a bus strip. The socket strip is used for connecting components together. It has two rows of short (5 contact) clips arranged one above another, like this:

\includegraphics[scale=0.650000]{socket.ps}
The bus strip is used to distribute power and ground voltages through the circuit. It has has six long (24 contact) clips arranged lengthwise, like this:
\includegraphics[scale=0.650000]{bus.ps}
Note that in their infinite wisdom, the manufacturer elected not to join the adjacent 24 contact strips into a single, full-length, 48 contact strip. This is actually convenient for creating isolated power buses, but if you want a single, continuous bus, you will have to bridge the central gap yourself.

When we combine two socket strips, three bus strips, power connectors, power tie points, interface modules, and an interface connector on a large printed circuit board, we get the complete breadboard:

\includegraphics[scale=0.750000]{sb_123.ps}
(In this picture we have replaced the plastic covers, hiding the connection between the terminal points.

The breadboard lets us connect components together and by wiring the bus strips to the binding posts and the binding posts to the power supply, to connect the power supply to the circuit. Now what we need is a way to bring connections from the rest of the instruments into the breadboard.