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Reddit mentions of Z&T Solderless Flexible Breadboard Jumper Wires M/M 100pcs

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of Z&T Solderless Flexible Breadboard Jumper Wires M/M 100pcs. Here are the top ones.

Z&T Solderless Flexible Breadboard Jumper Wires M/M 100pcs
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    Features:
  • Material- pure copper wire,PVC,Good conductivity,can be used repeatedly
  • Terrible Smell? - In other stores,I saw many customers complained of a bad smell,I feel very surprised,I smell my product,I got nothing,I guess maybe your puppy can smell something
  • About Quality - Some customers told us that the head of the cables is easy to fall off,so we improve it.Now,it's hard to drop the head of the wire,Unless you want to prove that you are as strong as the Popeye the Sailor man
  • inch(65pcs),6.29 inch(15pcs),7.87 inch(10pcs),9.84 inch(10pcs),many kinds of colors and sizes can do all kinds of circuit experiments
  • What you get - Not only 100 pcs Male to Male Solderless Flexible Breadboard Jumperwires,But also our friendly service
Specs:
Height0.9 Inches
Length6 Inches
Size100
Weight0.05 Pounds
Width1.9 Inches

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Found 4 comments on Z&T Solderless Flexible Breadboard Jumper Wires M/M 100pcs:

u/Leggo0 · 9 pointsr/ElectricalEngineering

These are parts I use consistently in my labs
Capacitor kit


Resistor kit


Jumper wires


Bread board(s)


Larger breadboard. Recommended for larger projects but I haven’t used it too much. Best for large IC circuits


Multimeter. This has all the right features

Other things that can be useful:


•Wire strippers


•Pliers


•Electrical Tape


•Tackle Box or tool bag (to carry everything)


Flat jumper wires


As you get into classes you’ll need specific parts (transistors, logic gates etc) but this should get you started. I use the things I linked in every lab weekly.

Feel free to message me with any questions.

u/bluecav · 3 pointsr/raspberry_pi

I'm an ECE that got into Raspberry Pi about a month ago. I work in microelectronics (chip design), and wanted to use it to get back into larger scale electronics hacking and to do some more hardware oriented programming and projects.

As such, I had to basically reform my electronics gadget supply at the same time since I ditched my college collection a while back when moving to a new house.

Here's some of the key things I bought to go with my Pi that I felt I needed. I'm assuming you're like me and want to work on electronics hardware (lights, switches, etc).

  • Raspberry Pi B+ : I wanted the larger sized one with more memory and USB ports as the prototype environment. As I get stuff fully working, then I plan to buy an A+ for the implementation environment. I bought the Canakit Ultimate Starter Kit on Amazon
  • You'll want a good microSD card. I swapped out the 8GB one from the Canakit for a 16GB one since I want to store some data on the card for a project I have in mind
  • A case : I used the one from the Canakit
  • A USB keyboard. The Logitech K400 is nice (just make sure to pair it on a PC first), or the Rii i8 Mini work nice (I have both)
  • If you want an onboard display, look at the PiTFT from Adafruit. I used that for my initial setup, then set up my Pi to autostart a VNC server on boot and now I work without a display. If you don't want the PiTFT, you can use a TV or a monitor if it supports HDMI (or a regular monitor with an HDMI to DVI adapter).
  • If hardware hacking, a breadboard and cobbler board : You'll want a breadboard for prototyping electronics projects before soldering to a PCB, and a cobbler board to connect the pin header of the Raspberry to your breadboard. I used the one from the Canakit but there are various ones out there you can buy
  • To go with a breadboard, I suggest flexible breadboard wire. These or these would work.
  • If hardware hacking, you'll want LEDs, switched, and resistors/capacitors. I really like these resistors (they came bagged and labelled), the LEDs I started out with from Radio Shack, and for switches I really like these ones. They snap right into a breadboard. The caps I just got at RadioShack.
  • You may want to grab a multimeter as well. I have two myself with different functions (one for logic probing mainly).

    Beyond those basic starter components, the rest is up to your imagination and what you want to do next. In my case, I plan to drive higher current components, so I'll be using optocouples and relays eventually. And I plan to make my own PCBs to snap onto the Raspberry, so I have PCBs, headers, and soldering stuff.

    If you're new to the Raspberry, there's online resources out there. I also got this book off Amazon as a starter as well, which I've been coupling with online resources.

    On the Arduino side, that's my next purchase since I may find it easier to have the software and server side of one of my projects on a Pi, and the hardware interface on an Arduino. I'm just going to get an R3 board to start since I have the rest of the stuff they usually include in a starter pack listed above.

    This blog did a nice writeup comparing some Arduino R3 starter kits:
    https://www.pretzellogix.net/2014/10/09/three-arduino-starter-kits-compared-and-reviewed/
u/zippy4457 · 2 pointsr/AskElectronics

Buy some of these.

These are handy too for connecting to modules with header pins.

Don't get too hung up on making everything nice and neat, if you try to get everything tight to the board and the leads all routed straight it just makes it harder to change things.

u/noggin182 · 1 pointr/arduino

This maybe? http://www.amazon.com/Solderless-Flexible-Breadboard-Jumper-100pcs/dp/B005TZJ0AM/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1341350174&sr=8-3&keywords=jumper+wire ?
I've bought a pack of 70 and had lying around too and ran out on a single project! It was so frustrating having to wait for something as simple as wires to be delivered!

It's much tidier and easier than using cut cable