Does anyone know of a good way to organize resistors or other components in those bins you hang on the wall?
My system is messy and not very good and I want to improve it so I can quickly find a given resistor value at any time. Any Ideas?
Does anyone know of a good way to organize resistors or other components in those bins you hang on the wall?
My system is messy and not very good and I want to improve it so I can quickly find a given resistor value at any time. Any Ideas?
For standard sizes of SMD resistors and capacitors I buy SMD lab kit books. So I have an 0603 resistor kit, an 0805 resistor kit and a 1206 resistor kit in E24 series values. These kits contain strips of 100 of each value. I have similar kits for various types and sizes of caps, so a book for 0603 C0G/X5R/X7R ceramic caps, a book for the same but 1206, a book for high voltage ceramics, a book for tantalums and low ESR polymer caps etc.... All the values of the common sizes of parts I need are now on hand and can be easily found. When a strip runs low I can just buy another strip of 100 pieces of that component from Digikey to re-stock.
Some vendors of other parts do lab kits too. If you look at Wurth electronics they have more types of sample kits than you can shake a stick at, but I don't actually have many of those because I make very good use of their free sample service and get parts shipped directly from them as I need them which saves having lots of stuff hanging around my lab. If you aren't aware of Wurth it's worth (no pun intended) taking a peek at their website (http://www.we-online.com) to see what they do.
I don't keep a large selection of IC's on hand, I do have some but not a lot. For the ones I have on hand they are in their original anti static packaging, labelled up and filed neatly together in a box. But I tend to order project kits as I need them and then keep the kits together in a project related box otherwise I think I would end up with a vast number of drawers with thousands of pounds worth of IC's sitting in them which seems a bit wasteful when its so quick to get parts delivered these days.
Best Regards,
Rachael
For standard sizes of SMD resistors and capacitors I buy SMD lab kit books. So I have an 0603 resistor kit, an 0805 resistor kit and a 1206 resistor kit in E24 series values. These kits contain strips of 100 of each value. I have similar kits for various types and sizes of caps, so a book for 0603 C0G/X5R/X7R ceramic caps, a book for the same but 1206, a book for high voltage ceramics, a book for tantalums and low ESR polymer caps etc.... All the values of the common sizes of parts I need are now on hand and can be easily found. When a strip runs low I can just buy another strip of 100 pieces of that component from Digikey to re-stock.
Some vendors of other parts do lab kits too. If you look at Wurth electronics they have more types of sample kits than you can shake a stick at, but I don't actually have many of those because I make very good use of their free sample service and get parts shipped directly from them as I need them which saves having lots of stuff hanging around my lab. If you aren't aware of Wurth it's worth (no pun intended) taking a peek at their website (http://www.we-online.com) to see what they do.
I don't keep a large selection of IC's on hand, I do have some but not a lot. For the ones I have on hand they are in their original anti static packaging, labelled up and filed neatly together in a box. But I tend to order project kits as I need them and then keep the kits together in a project related box otherwise I think I would end up with a vast number of drawers with thousands of pounds worth of IC's sitting in them which seems a bit wasteful when its so quick to get parts delivered these days.
Best Regards,
Rachael
Wurth also does free sample kits. I have half a dozen sitting on my bench top.
I do have a couple of their smaller free SMD ferrite kits, I'm not sure how many free kits they do now though? Their other bigger kits tend to be at a cost but then have free lifetime refills once you have purchased them.
I suppose it depends on what company you work for. They might not be free for hobbyists.
Here's a link that implies that they are free for university use: