wiring strip - definitie. Wat is wiring strip
Diclib.com
Woordenboek ChatGPT
Voer een woord of zin in in een taal naar keuze 👆
Taal:

Vertaling en analyse van woorden door kunstmatige intelligentie ChatGPT

Op deze pagina kunt u een gedetailleerde analyse krijgen van een woord of zin, geproduceerd met behulp van de beste kunstmatige intelligentietechnologie tot nu toe:

  • hoe het woord wordt gebruikt
  • gebruiksfrequentie
  • het wordt vaker gebruikt in mondelinge of schriftelijke toespraken
  • opties voor woordvertaling
  • Gebruiksvoorbeelden (meerdere zinnen met vertaling)
  • etymologie

Wat (wie) is wiring strip - definitie

METHOD FOR ASSEMBLING ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
Point to point wiring; Point-to-point hand wiring; Terminal strip; Point-to-point wiring; Dead Bug; Free-form construction
  • Point to point wiring on a homemade tube amplifier circuit.

On-premises wiring         
CUSTOMER-OWNED TELECOMMUNICATION TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION LINES
Inside wiring; Customer-premises wiring; Customer premises wiring; On premises wiring; Premises wiring
On-premises wiring (customer premises wiring) is customer-owned telecommunication transmission or distribution lines.[tsp.
Electrical wiring         
  • Wiring layout plan for a house
  • Busbars for distributing [[protective earth]] (ground)
  • Bare copper
  • Black
  • Dark Blue
  • Brown
  • Green
  • Green/Yellow
  • 80px
  • Light Blue
  • Orange
  • Red
  • White
  • Yellow
  • rockwool]] on the bottom, for a 2-hour [[fire-resistance rating]].
  • rockwool]] on the bottom. Raceways are used to protect cables from damage.
  • Colour-coded wires in a flexible plastic [[electrical conduit]] found commonly in modern European houses
  • electrical service room]] at a paper mill in [[Ontario]], Canada
  • Installing electrical wiring by "chasing" grooves into the masonry structure of the walls of a building
  • Lead-cased electrical cable from a circa 1912 house in southern England. Two conductors are sheathed in red and black rubber, and the central earth wire is bare. These cables are dangerous because the sheath is prone to split if repeatedly flexed.
  • Diagram of a simple electrical cable with three insulated conductors, with IEC colour scheme.
  • Copper sheathed mineral insulated cables at a panel board
  • A [[cable tray]] can be used in stores and dwellings
  • US single-phase residential power distribution transformer, showing the two insulated "Line" conductors and the bare "Neutral" conductor (derived from the earthed center-tap of the transformer). The distribution supporting cantenaries are also shown.
  • Knob-and-tube wiring (the orange cable is an unrelated extension cord)
  • Terminal blocks for joining aluminium and copper conductors. The terminal blocks may be mounted on a [[DIN rail]].
ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION OF CABLING AND ASSOCIATED DEVICES SUCH AS SWITCHES IN A STRUCTURE
Wiring; Building wiring; Electric Cable; Non-metallic cable; Electrical wire; Electric wire; Electrical services; AS/NZS 3000; Enameled Cooper Wire; Electrical Wire; Electrical wires; Electric wires; Branch circuit; Live wire (electricity); Electric wiring; Wire color; Electrical cables; Rewiring; Consumer mains wiring; Consumer Mains Wiring; Wire color code; Live terminal; Live terminals; Electrical cabling; Electric cabling; Electricity cable; Electricity cabling; Electricity wiring; Electricity wire; Non-metallic sheathed cable; Cloth-insulated wiring; Electrical wiring rule; Electrical installations; Electrical installation; Electrical Installation; Color coding of electrical wiring; Electric installations; Wiring Rules; Interwiring
Electrical wiring is an electrical installation of cabling and associated devices such as switches, distribution boards, sockets, and light fittings in a structure.
wiring         
  • Wiring layout plan for a house
  • Busbars for distributing [[protective earth]] (ground)
  • Bare copper
  • Black
  • Dark Blue
  • Brown
  • Green
  • Green/Yellow
  • 80px
  • Light Blue
  • Orange
  • Red
  • White
  • Yellow
  • rockwool]] on the bottom, for a 2-hour [[fire-resistance rating]].
  • rockwool]] on the bottom. Raceways are used to protect cables from damage.
  • Colour-coded wires in a flexible plastic [[electrical conduit]] found commonly in modern European houses
  • electrical service room]] at a paper mill in [[Ontario]], Canada
  • Installing electrical wiring by "chasing" grooves into the masonry structure of the walls of a building
  • Lead-cased electrical cable from a circa 1912 house in southern England. Two conductors are sheathed in red and black rubber, and the central earth wire is bare. These cables are dangerous because the sheath is prone to split if repeatedly flexed.
  • Diagram of a simple electrical cable with three insulated conductors, with IEC colour scheme.
  • Copper sheathed mineral insulated cables at a panel board
  • A [[cable tray]] can be used in stores and dwellings
  • US single-phase residential power distribution transformer, showing the two insulated "Line" conductors and the bare "Neutral" conductor (derived from the earthed center-tap of the transformer). The distribution supporting cantenaries are also shown.
  • Knob-and-tube wiring (the orange cable is an unrelated extension cord)
  • Terminal blocks for joining aluminium and copper conductors. The terminal blocks may be mounted on a [[DIN rail]].
ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION OF CABLING AND ASSOCIATED DEVICES SUCH AS SWITCHES IN A STRUCTURE
Wiring; Building wiring; Electric Cable; Non-metallic cable; Electrical wire; Electric wire; Electrical services; AS/NZS 3000; Enameled Cooper Wire; Electrical Wire; Electrical wires; Electric wires; Branch circuit; Live wire (electricity); Electric wiring; Wire color; Electrical cables; Rewiring; Consumer mains wiring; Consumer Mains Wiring; Wire color code; Live terminal; Live terminals; Electrical cabling; Electric cabling; Electricity cable; Electricity cabling; Electricity wiring; Electricity wire; Non-metallic sheathed cable; Cloth-insulated wiring; Electrical wiring rule; Electrical installations; Electrical installation; Electrical Installation; Color coding of electrical wiring; Electric installations; Wiring Rules; Interwiring
n.
1) defective, faulty wiring
2) electric wiring

Wikipedia

Point-to-point construction

In electronics, point-to-point construction is a non-automated technique for constructing circuits which was widely used before the use of printed circuit boards (PCBs) and automated assembly gradually became widespread following their introduction in the 1950s. Circuits using thermionic valves (vacuum tubes) were relatively large, relatively simple (the number of large, hot, expensive devices which needed replacing was minimised), and used large sockets, all of which made the PCB less obviously advantageous than with later complex semiconductor circuits. Point-to-point construction is still widespread in power electronics, where components are bulky and serviceability is a consideration, and to construct prototype equipment with few or heavy electronic components. A common practice, especially in older point-to-point construction, is to use the leads of components such as resistors and capacitors to bridge as much of the distance between connections as possible, reducing the need to add additional wire between the components.

Before point-to-point connection, electrical assemblies used screws or wire nuts to hold wires to an insulating wooden or ceramic board. The resulting devices were prone to fail from corroded contacts, or mechanical loosening of the connections. Early premium marine radios, especially from Marconi, sometimes used welded copper in the bus-bar circuits, but this was expensive. The crucial invention was to apply soldering to electrical assembly. In soldering, an alloy of tin and lead (and/or other metals), known as solder, is melted and adheres to other, nonmolten metals, such as copper or tinned steel. Solder makes a strong electrical and mechanical connection.

Point-to-point wiring is not suitable for automated assembly (though see wire wrap, a similar method that is) and is carried out manually, making it both more expensive and more susceptible to wiring errors than PCBs, as connections are determined by the person doing assembly rather than by an etched circuit board. For production, rather than prototyping, errors can be minimised by carefully designed operating procedures.

An intermediate form of construction uses terminal strips (sometimes called "tag boards"), eyelet boards or turret boards. Note that if components are arranged on boards with tags, eyelets or turrets at both ends and wires going to the next components, then the construction is correctly called tag, eyelet or turret construction respectively, as the components are not going from point to point. Although cordwood construction can be wired in a similar way the density means that component placement is usually fixed by a substrate that components are inserted into.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor wiring strip
1. Healthy packed lunch guide for parents NEWS HOMEPAGE Pictures video Video: Fashion Editor Natalie Theo reports from London Fashion Week Video: Blair joins stars at PR guru‘s party Gallery: Our eye–catching pictures of the day Video: Thousands pay their respects to Steve Irwin Pictures and video: The best viral emails around MORE PHOTOS VIDEO They live in your loft, breed like rabbits, go bump in the night, gnaw through wiring, strip fruit trees in your garden – and you can‘t touch them because they‘re a protected species.