grockj
Mechanical
- Dec 29, 2008
- 9
I am currently laying the ground work for the mechanical design of a new product for which I am in charge of many electromechanical interfaces, which additionally means I will be specifying our wiring harnesses.
Given:
1) Various 5VDC sensors on a regulated line
2) Sensors have a ratiometric output so I definitely care about the supply voltage they receive
3) Wiring has to pass from main PCB through a wall which acts as a gas barrier
4) I am limited on space on said wall so I am trying to pass as few wires through as possible (I would like to pass through 2 for the device power for these if at all possible)
5) The opposite side of the wall (which contains the sensors) should be considered "dirty" in so far that an open terminal block may not be the best idea due to corrosion/lifetime contact resistance, but industry consultants inform me un-sealed tin plated terminal type connectors will certainly suffice beyond the expected life of my product
6) Current is sufficiently low and external effects on my 5VDC regulated output can be dismissed
Question: What is the preferred method to distribute the 5 VDC power to my array of sensors if I only want to pass 2 wires through the wall?
Goal: I am designing a wiring harness scheme which I will farm out to a harness shop.
- Terminal blocks are open for contact resistance issues from corrosion & contamination, or are there available methods to mitigate this? What about vibration?
- Could splicing inside the harness itself be sufficient? How many times can a wire be split out assuming current is not an issue before the harness manufacturing becomes infeasible? Significant cost driver here?
- Is it generally infeasible to only pass through 2 wires for the 5VDC "rail"?
- Other concerns?
Cheers,
grockj
Given:
1) Various 5VDC sensors on a regulated line
2) Sensors have a ratiometric output so I definitely care about the supply voltage they receive
3) Wiring has to pass from main PCB through a wall which acts as a gas barrier
4) I am limited on space on said wall so I am trying to pass as few wires through as possible (I would like to pass through 2 for the device power for these if at all possible)
5) The opposite side of the wall (which contains the sensors) should be considered "dirty" in so far that an open terminal block may not be the best idea due to corrosion/lifetime contact resistance, but industry consultants inform me un-sealed tin plated terminal type connectors will certainly suffice beyond the expected life of my product
6) Current is sufficiently low and external effects on my 5VDC regulated output can be dismissed
Question: What is the preferred method to distribute the 5 VDC power to my array of sensors if I only want to pass 2 wires through the wall?
Goal: I am designing a wiring harness scheme which I will farm out to a harness shop.
- Terminal blocks are open for contact resistance issues from corrosion & contamination, or are there available methods to mitigate this? What about vibration?
- Could splicing inside the harness itself be sufficient? How many times can a wire be split out assuming current is not an issue before the harness manufacturing becomes infeasible? Significant cost driver here?
- Is it generally infeasible to only pass through 2 wires for the 5VDC "rail"?
- Other concerns?
Cheers,
grockj