Mail Archives: geda-user/2012/11/16/18:15:52
No, not Mictors...They are nice, but these were connectors that didn't
have a mating side that you'd mount on a board. There'd be a footprint
that you'd place on the PCB and the pogo pins on the connector would
just touch the pads.
That part is easy of course. What I saw in a magazine several years
ago were shrouded connectors with pogo pins in the middle but the outer
shroud had little clips on it, and they'd snap into holes in the board
around the pad field and hold the pogo pins into place.
-Dave
On 11/16/2012 05:58 PM, asomers AT gmail DOT com wrote:
> Are you thinking of mictor connectors? They're good for high speed
> debugging; I've seen them on ARM systems as well as AVR32. The downside
> is that they are very expensive.
>
> http://www.mouser.com/search/Refine.aspx?Ntt=AMP%20MICTOR%20Connectors
>
> On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 3:33 PM, Peter Stuge <peter AT stuge DOT se
> <mailto:peter AT stuge DOT se>> wrote:
>
> Dave McGuire wrote:
> > I've about had it with putting 0.1" 10x2 headers in my layouts for a
> > connector that I'll only use once. I remember having seen a type of
> > connector, possibly aimed specifically at the ARM JTAG world, for
> which
> > you'd put a set of what looked like SMT pads and a couple of holes in
> > your board, and this connector had pogo pins and clips that would snap
> > onto the board.
> >
> > I think I'd like to move in that direction. Does anyone know what
> > these are? Can anyone say anything positive or negative about them?
>
> I don't know what exactly you refer to re. snapin, but the new ARM
> thing is a small 5x2 50mil Samtec SHF-105-01-L-D-TH.
>
> http://uk.farnell.com/samtec/shf-105-01-l-d-th/header-1-27mm-2x5way/dp/1801434
>
> While maybe more popular on SWD parts it can do JTAG too.
>
>
> //Peter
>
>
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA
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