Cat5 STP for motor wires?
Posted: Sun Jul 19, 2015 11:10 pm
I've finished building the machine (except the up-cam). It's very slick, but the wiring doesn't look quite as neat as the rest of the machine.
Is it possible to use Cat5 STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) for the motor wires? It's manufactured in high volume so the quality:price ratio is very very high. And it comes with those nice connectors professionally mounted to the ends, no soldering.
Each cable carries eight 24AWG wires, so to be safe one should use two Cat5 wires for each motor wire (the liteplacer recommends 20AWG wire). This still works out nicely; one Cat5-STP cable drives one motor. For everything else (limit switches, LED power, solenoid) a single 24AWG wire per connection should be enough.
Unless I'm way off course here I assume it's best for each motor wire to use one wire from each of two different twisted pairs rather than using both wires of a single twisted pair, right? And, of course, the motor-wires which share a coil should use Cat5-STP wires which are twisted together. Right?
If this is workable, it means I can order up a nice little breakout PCB with a board-mounted RJ45 receptacle, board-mounted screw posts (like on the TinyG) and drill-holes and board size/shape customized for mounting on the liteplacer. The Cat5 receptacle and screwposts get soldered down to the PCB, the PCB gets screwed to the machine. No more heat-shrink wire-wrapping. The cables would be a standard part available on amazon (for example: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JUJ2JZG)
Let me know if you can think of any obvious reasons why this is stupid... if not I'll try it out. I think it could make for a much better "out of box experience" for future customers; Juha could throw in a PCB or two and a bag of connectors and leave the through-hole soldering to the buyer.
Is it possible to use Cat5 STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) for the motor wires? It's manufactured in high volume so the quality:price ratio is very very high. And it comes with those nice connectors professionally mounted to the ends, no soldering.
Each cable carries eight 24AWG wires, so to be safe one should use two Cat5 wires for each motor wire (the liteplacer recommends 20AWG wire). This still works out nicely; one Cat5-STP cable drives one motor. For everything else (limit switches, LED power, solenoid) a single 24AWG wire per connection should be enough.
Unless I'm way off course here I assume it's best for each motor wire to use one wire from each of two different twisted pairs rather than using both wires of a single twisted pair, right? And, of course, the motor-wires which share a coil should use Cat5-STP wires which are twisted together. Right?
If this is workable, it means I can order up a nice little breakout PCB with a board-mounted RJ45 receptacle, board-mounted screw posts (like on the TinyG) and drill-holes and board size/shape customized for mounting on the liteplacer. The Cat5 receptacle and screwposts get soldered down to the PCB, the PCB gets screwed to the machine. No more heat-shrink wire-wrapping. The cables would be a standard part available on amazon (for example: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JUJ2JZG)
Let me know if you can think of any obvious reasons why this is stupid... if not I'll try it out. I think it could make for a much better "out of box experience" for future customers; Juha could throw in a PCB or two and a bag of connectors and leave the through-hole soldering to the buyer.