Circuit board connector?
Circuit board connector?
(OP)
Hello everyone,I been meaning to post a topic on here,not enough hours in a day with long working hours.
My question is regarding an 1980s Ford that has a trip computer,where at the back of the computer,a connector slides onto the PCB tracks. I'm hoping someone might be able to identify the type of connector. Or alternatively,perhaps an alternative type of connector can be added onto the pcb tracks,like a pitch connector?
thanks
Paul
My question is regarding an 1980s Ford that has a trip computer,where at the back of the computer,a connector slides onto the PCB tracks. I'm hoping someone might be able to identify the type of connector. Or alternatively,perhaps an alternative type of connector can be added onto the pcb tracks,like a pitch connector?
thanks
Paul






RE: Circuit board connector?
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
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Half full - Half empty? I don't mind. It's what in it that counts.
RE: Circuit board connector?
They also preclude "standard" circuit boards because you need the PCB to be routed in the appropriate pattern to support the female connector.
Keith Cress
kcress - http://www.flaminsystems.com
RE: Circuit board connector?
forum67: Automotive electrical & sensor engineering
Bill
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"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter
RE: Circuit board connector?
RE: Circuit board connector?
Take a look at:
Tyco Electronics - CROWN EDGE, Standard Edge, SEC-II. Probably not generic enough.
Tyco Electronics - AMP PACE. More generic but designed for connection to another board via through hole rather than to a wire.
CINCH - Edge Connector Commercial. Could be a winner - quite generic slots and they have to wire options.
EDAC - Series 306/316/356. Similar to CINCH. Difficultly will be finding stock somewhere without having to order a million.
AVX - Series 00-9159. A last resort perhaps - very generic edge connectors, but on the other end it's just another edge connector. You'd have to adapt from that to a wire interface.
Samtec - Didn't identify any particular series, but they have a huge range.
Failing all that, your idea about drilling holes and soldering in a different connector sounds perfectly feasible. With a decent template and a very steady hand, you could probably even do it by hand.