I've been experimenting with the idea of using plain copper wire for conductors, as "bend alloy" has so far been shown to be unobtainable in NZ. The L-sectioned posts I'd blogged earlier don't look easy to fabricate, so I wondered about creating a 'trap' out of wire to hold chip legs and components in. I wrapped wire into 3 figure-of-eight shapes around some posts (the remainder were just to keep the wire out of the way) and pressed a PIC into the gaps, taking care not to actually touch the posts themselves:
Even the single strand on the far left produced a contact resistance of <0.1 Ohms. A heated hypodermic could trail a wire around on a RepRap platform, and terminate the wires by pushing them into a Polymorph surface. Some form of cunning nipper would be needed to cut the wire off, a few mm clear of the end of the needle and fold it off to the side. I think the next stab at the Polymorph surface would then form the wire into a J-shape, creating a primitive barb to anchor the wire in the setting Polymorph. Once the wire is in place, of course, the RepRap can bury it in plastic if necessary.
Do the assembled think it would be worth pursuing this concept? I can find a hypodermic and warm it up a bit to test the Polymorph anchoring. The wrapping would need some FDM'ing of suitable plastic posts of various shapes for straightforward wire-wrapping (junctions) and making sockets with. Suggestions on potential post shapes welcome.
Vik :v)
I'd have thought that a salt would (a) need to be wet to conduct, and (b) have significant corrosion problems with regards to the wire and component legs. Standard procedure is to keep greases and salts out of the way. Conductive grease is only thermally conductive.
ReplyDeleteIf the wire itself does not offer significant tension, there are other options.
I could wrap a post, and then snap another plastic part down on top of the chip to push the posts against the chip legs.
Or I could have the snap-down part exert additional stress on the wire to guarantee contact.
The trick is to get the square edge of the component leg against the wire so that the edge digs into the wire.
Vik :v)
You could insert the chips upside down in the build, and then wire wrap directly to the pins on the chip, istead of trying to form sockets. Standard wire-wrapping tools and materials would then be useable. Admittedly, at higher power levels there could be heat dissipation issues.
ReplyDelete