tangent
Top Mall-Fi poster. The T in META42.
Formerly with Tangentsoft Parts Store
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2001
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I was going to put this in the thread that inspired it, but it seems to deserve its own thread. I suspect it will cause some discussion.
In electronics, you find several different kinds of boards for prototyping. There's plain perfboard without copper, perfboard with various copper patterns printed on it, solid copper-clad boards, solderless plugboards, and a few less-common products. You can add in a few generic terms and genericized brand names, too, like protoboard and Vectorboard.
There are a few terms that aren't conflicted at all. I doubt anyone argues about what Vectorboard, perfboard and plugboard each refer to.
Other terms are often used interchangeably, and some groups of people will often have specific meanings for each term but these meanings aren't universal.
One problem term is "protoboard." It's short for "prototyping board", which you could argue applies to any of the types of boards you can find. Because of this, using the term without qualification is probably confusing no matter what you apply it to. I'm guilty of this -- I use it to mean copper-patterned perfboard, but I don't make that clear very often.
The term "bread board" originally referred to a chunk of wood used for cutting bread on, back before everyone bought their bread pre-sliced. Bread boards were convenient back in the days before solid state electronics matured: they were cheap, easily available, a good size for typical electronic projects, and sturdy enough to support tube sockets, transformers, barrier strips, and the huge capacitors of the day. The occasional resistor could be air-wired in line with the 14-gauge point-to-point wires you ran between components. No one uses the term that way any more, except in phrases like "solderless breadboard", which is the white stuff that's also called "plugboard". You could just as well use the term to refer to perfboard, it has just as much claim to this antiquated term.
Just to show that these two terms are generic, Radio Shack calls their regular white plugboards "solderless breadboard", which a lot of people shorten to just "breadboard". But, they call their large plugboard-cum-power-supply setups "proto-boards". I'm sure a lot of newbies first learn these terms while wandering the Radio Shack aisles.
In electronics, you find several different kinds of boards for prototyping. There's plain perfboard without copper, perfboard with various copper patterns printed on it, solid copper-clad boards, solderless plugboards, and a few less-common products. You can add in a few generic terms and genericized brand names, too, like protoboard and Vectorboard.
There are a few terms that aren't conflicted at all. I doubt anyone argues about what Vectorboard, perfboard and plugboard each refer to.
Other terms are often used interchangeably, and some groups of people will often have specific meanings for each term but these meanings aren't universal.
One problem term is "protoboard." It's short for "prototyping board", which you could argue applies to any of the types of boards you can find. Because of this, using the term without qualification is probably confusing no matter what you apply it to. I'm guilty of this -- I use it to mean copper-patterned perfboard, but I don't make that clear very often.
The term "bread board" originally referred to a chunk of wood used for cutting bread on, back before everyone bought their bread pre-sliced. Bread boards were convenient back in the days before solid state electronics matured: they were cheap, easily available, a good size for typical electronic projects, and sturdy enough to support tube sockets, transformers, barrier strips, and the huge capacitors of the day. The occasional resistor could be air-wired in line with the 14-gauge point-to-point wires you ran between components. No one uses the term that way any more, except in phrases like "solderless breadboard", which is the white stuff that's also called "plugboard". You could just as well use the term to refer to perfboard, it has just as much claim to this antiquated term.
Just to show that these two terms are generic, Radio Shack calls their regular white plugboards "solderless breadboard", which a lot of people shorten to just "breadboard". But, they call their large plugboard-cum-power-supply setups "proto-boards". I'm sure a lot of newbies first learn these terms while wandering the Radio Shack aisles.