I'll bet a lot of people probably used some of these on a first electronics project long ago. I did, and you may be able to guess what the project was.
Got any stories?
These are still available today, out of cheaper material of course! Newark has nearly 2,000 in stock, at 33 cents a piece. The drawing shows some vestige of a tab, but the pictures I've seen don't show a tab.
my grandfather had an older version of the "project kit".... not from RS.... EICO i think, that had tubes and tube sockets, and lots of other parts mounted on a heavy piece of cardboard with the Fahnestock clips for making connections, and yes they were much more reliable connections than the round springs.
the round springs tend to build up a little bit of corrosion in damp climates.
One of my first projects was building a crystal radio in the Cub Scouts. Fahnestock clips were used for the antenna and ground connections and to connect the earpiece. It looked a lot like the picture shown here.
Never come across those before, the inferior spring type yes. I'm guessing pushing it down allows you to place wires in the loop which are gripped when the pressure is released. I built a similar crystal radio and listened to the first moon landing on it - showing my age now.
I had a kit for Christmas back in the early '60s where each component was mounted on a plastic carrier. The kit was supplied with paper overlays which each had a particular circuit on it. This was laid onto a perforated board with holes in about a half inch grid, and each carrier was linked with wires using clips very similar to those Fahnestock ones. I'm in England, by the way, and it had OC44, 71 & OA81's in it!
Those kits you all mentioned were before my time. However, I can't help but think I've seen these before, somewhere. Unfortunately, I can't for the life of me remember where I saw them.
Why?, America is full of names from all over the world, due to their (wise) early immigration policy - whereas in the UK you expect 'Smith' and 'Brown' etc. I never expect anything so pedestrian from the USA. And of course they imported some serious brains over the centuries - Einstein, Tesla etc.
To be fair, I wouldn't even have a clue where Fahnestock originates, and the USA would probably be my first thought - without cheating (and using google), and noticing the NY address, I'd 'guess' at Dutch?, from New Amsterdam.
just a simple piece of tin plated stamped metal can be SOOOO useful... pure genius... saw in one or more ads there they were giving away free samples...
Springs and wire clips shaped a little like a a narrow OHM symbol?
All pushed through a peg board.
Was the Philips Electronic Engineer Kit.
That got me started.
Springs and wire clips shaped a little like a a narrow OHM symbol?
All pushed through a peg board.
Was the Philips Electronic Engineer Kit.
That got me started.
Lionel and American Flyer train sets had them for connecting wires from the power supply to the rails. A specialized clip would clip onto the O or S gauge tracks. The clip would have Fahnestock clips that you would clip the wire to the transformer onto.
This pic from the product page on Amazon. Lionel called them Lockon's.