This is the JP1 beginners forum. There's no such thing as a stupid question in here, so post away, but this forum is just for JP1 users and people considering JP1, non-JP1 users please use the appropriate forum above!
If I understood you right you are cutting a 72 pin IDE connector into 6 pin connectors for JP1 interface cables?
The easiest way i did mine was to take a good hacksaw blade and use just the blade ( not installed in the saw). Cut the IDE connector with the blade and hold it with your hands or wrap it with a rag and put it in a vise. If you need to make as many 6 pin connectors as you can, then the vise option may not be good as you can damage the rest of the IDE connector. You will need to file the edges of the six pin connector when you are done to make it nice. I then put some epoxy on the edges and the ribbon cable to make mine strong. I have used my cable repeatedly without fail- Bob
Last edited by BobF on Tue Dec 30, 2003 9:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I just finished making my first JP1 cable. It won't win any beauty contest but it is functional.
To make my 6pin connecter I used a pvc pipe saw I had laying around. Just saw thru the 4 hole and it works pretty well.
Those instructions work well for making a female 6-hole connector for the JP1 cable.
I am trying to make 6 pin headers (that eventually get soldered into remotes that may need them in the future). This is the piece that the JP1 cable will plug into. Some remotes (6012, 6131) come with a place on the PCB for an EEPROM and a 6pin header, but for some reason the nice folks at UEI/OFA decided to save a few pennies and not install them.
Rob (or anyone), how do you accomplish this trick? hacksaw blade? sharp teeth? heat vision?
I have an exacto hobby saw and miter box that i bought as a set from a hobby place. It is used for cutting balsa wood for things like model airplanes. The saw is so thin and the teeth as so fine it would be perfect for the precision work you want to do. I would bet that you could almost cut the header between pins and still use both sides without waste! (you would have to try it to see).
I know Mark already mentioned this type of saw, but I thought I would confirm the idea!-Bob
I find it was easier to physically pull out the IDC pins int the position where you cut. Almost any tool will then cut the connector which can be neatly filed down
Dave
I remember my wedding day like it was yesterday.
If it had been tomorrow I wouldn't have turned up!
daveoram wrote:I find it was easier to physically pull out the IDC pins int the position where you cut. Almost any tool will then cut the connector which can be neatly filed down
Dave
Wow, that's really making things WAY harder that they need to be. Using the clippers shown below I can cut up a header strip as easy as cutting up paper.
Rob www.hifi-remote.com Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
Might be a good idea.... I used the jumpers from an old computer... the ones that go from the LED, Power, Reset etc.... to the motherboard. I glued them together and made a 6pin female connector. Doeas anyone see any problems with such a device?