8 Breadboard Hacks To Make Life Easier

If you like messing around with electronics, one of the best tools you can have on hand is a solderless breaboard. These handy little chunks of plastic just let you “plug n play” so you can quickly develop a circuit before committing it to solder and fiberglass. Handy as they are, they do have their downsides such as:  stuff not fitting, split up power rails, running out of jumpers or just taming what can quickly become a birds nest of a mess.

Luckily the folks over at [Proto Stack] have published a handy article giving us 8 Breadboard Hacks. While anyone that has used breadboads for any length of time will have probably figured most of these out, its still good knowledge for any newcomers to the sometimes aggravating world of plastic and jumpers.

Also we know there are more hacks you can do to make your lives easier and would love to hear them in the comments.

39 thoughts on “8 Breadboard Hacks To Make Life Easier

  1. 1. Bribe an electrician (Beer usually works)
    2. Ask him if you can have all the wires cut-off from old ballasts, or the extra in new ones (people like me hate the mess & cut off quite a few inches when installing the new one).
    3. Have breadboard jumpers for life in white, black, yellow, red, blue. Sometimes purple.

    I was lucky enough to get the “sh*t” assignment of replacing fluorescents at work; relamping thousands of 32W with 28W lamps, took over a MONTH. Many needed ballasts. I’m swimming in dozens of pounds of jumpers up to 36″ :)

  2. Soldering microswitches to 2×2 pin headers makes adding push buttons to test circuits very easy, and they’re sturdy.

    I’ve also soldered some miniature DPDT push switches to some 2×3 pin headers and also two 1×3 pin headers with a gap so it can be plugged into the middle of the breadboard.

  3. Twist ties work the best for bread boarding, just strip both ends, they can be bent about 1000000000000000000000000000000000000 times before they break and are super cheap, the plastic coated ones look better than the paper, but both work.

    1. Yeah, but you’ll need the catx-cable that one usually puts into walls. Thats the one with the one-wire cores…the less flexible one.

      Usual patch-cable won’t do because of the multiwire cores. That’s the flexible one.

  4. Dunno but I still prefer the 18GA 105 degree C rated wire in ballast wiring to CAT-5, most of which (except newer manufacture) isnt even plenum rated. I know it’s only a breadboard, but I love overkill.

  5. My favourite trick is to stick long header pins through the holes of a solder (not solderless!) breadboard, solder them in place, which creates a “breadboard shield”, similar to an Arduino shield. I’ve used this several times to put non-breadboardable parts onto a breadboard, or at least to create breadboard modules. I’m sure that I’m not the only person to have come up with this…

  6. The best tip I know of is to use square post, wire wrap machined pin sockets. You can pop the pins out of the socket base (throw that away) and use the square pins in the breadboard. Your bread board will last forever (the square pins are a perfect fit) and you can inset components into the “socket part” of the pins. Over sized resistors even.

    If you get those pins in a header strip instead of IC sockets (it’s easier to break the pins out too) then you can insert chips, even surface mount components. Make little strips for parts like “bus” jumpers, LED indicators etc…

    if you don’t want the expense of the strips, you can sometimes find an old Wire Wrap board on eBay. These were generally made by Augat or somebody. And have thousands of pins. It’s work to remove the wire. But if you look, you can find them “new” with no wires.

    I have a life time supply of those gold pins from one board.

  7. Oh Yeah, you can also insert wire into those pins, cover the joint with some heat shrink, and make those fancy dancy little jumpers you see in the photo. Lasts a long time too.

    I use them for switches and buttons. Now I just pick up a button, and stick it on the board. no more trying to fit the switch or button on there, they automatically fit.

  8. I usually link one of the power buses to the main one with a resistor for projects that use multiple LEDs. Saves attaching a resistor to each LED.

    Doing something like this can be pretty handy, so, for that reason, I wouldn’t permanently link the buses.

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