| Easy
indirect pinning or cross-pinning. |
| • |
Ribbon Cable is extremely
difficult to separate and reroute wires, especially when they have only
10 primary colors in the entire cable.
|
| |
|
| Design
using multi-pair or multi-conductor cables with foil, drain or braid. |
| • |
Most "Twist-N-Flat" ribbon
cable is not available with foil, drain, braid and outer jacket.
|
| |
|
| Improved
air flow through your chassis. |
| • |
Much better air flow
in tight areas (ex. 50 conductor ribbon cable is 2.5" wide while standard
50 conductor cable is only .40" outside diameter - an 84% size reduction).
|
| |
|
| Complete
routing flexibility. |
| • |
Ribbon cable is flexible
in only one direction. Any direction change requires the cable to be
folded, causing stress, fatigue and damage to copper conductors.
|
| |
|
| Specify
overall lengths to +/- .125." |
| • |
With Round to Flat
point to point pin outs can be tightly specified, whereas "Twist-N-Flat" cable
and prelaminated cables have flat portions at designated intervals. Designers
are left with an unwieldy mass of extra cable.
|
|
| Cable
Jacket Colors matched to frame colors. |
| • |
Not available in most
flat cables.
|
| |
|
| Place
multiple connectors where you want them. |
| • |
With "Twist-N-Flat" and
prelaminated cables you must place additional connectors only in available
flat areas. With Round to Flat, you can place additional connectors exactly
where you need them.
|
| |
|
| No additional
strain reliefs required. |
| • |
With Round to Flat,
a special laminated area outside the connector serves as the strain relief.
|
| |
|
| Easier
bundling and cable harness routing. |
| • |
Ribbon cables are virtually
impossible to route cleanly through frames and chassises.
|
|