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EE Tray

EE Tray
Simple to make, and great for shared workspaces. Grab a food tray, add power jacks, breadboards and component containers.
 
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Step 1The Parts

The Parts
Key components: female banana plugs, breadboards, component containers, velcro (not pictured) and, of course, a food tray.

I find that Maxim chip sample containers make for some of the better component cases.
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19 comments
May 18, 2006. 3:34 AMwestfw says:
Neat idea. Um, lacking a school cafeteria from which to borrow one, just where DOES one find food trays of substantial size like this? (I supposed there is the COMPANY cafeteria...) Retail stores seem to have smaller, fancier trays that are fine, but expensive...
Sep 3, 2010. 7:03 PMsilencekilla says:
steal one from mcdonalds or a mall food court lol i work at mcdonalds so it makes it funny
Jul 25, 2006. 12:33 PMPopcorn Dave says:
If you have an Ikea store nearby, I just picked up some plastic trays for about $5 each. I'd only be worried about static from a plastic tray though.
May 18, 2006. 12:14 PMandreq says:
You could actualy "borrow" one from some fastfood restaurant :D
May 18, 2006. 6:19 AMradiorental says:
a bit of ply with some trim would do the trip... but I'm making a trip to the company crapeteria today for sure. Get half a dozen of these and make a project shelving unit
Nov 25, 2006. 4:25 PMzachninme says:
Funny how you use banana plugs and a breadboard with a food tray :-P
Nice project!
Mar 15, 2010. 1:23 PMAzayles says:
Plus handy boxes to put his chips in :P
Aug 31, 2009. 7:43 PMThe Ideanator says:
I see what you did there.
Oct 29, 2006. 3:31 PMdfowler7437 says:
User your PC to power the bread board. I put up some instructions at http://www.uchobby.com/index.php/2006/10/29/power-projects-from-your-pc/
Jul 14, 2006. 4:48 PMIan01 says:
What's Vee?
May 18, 2006. 8:10 PMspinach_dip says:
Where do you get those "old maxim chip containers"? I have one I got from an ebay seller when I bought some RGB LEDs. I'd love to get a bunch of them fairly cheap.
May 18, 2006. 8:56 PMradiorental says:
you could easily build in tray compartments with anything from duct tape folded in half to strips of plastic/plywood hotglued to the base, would end up looking something like a tv-dinner tray
May 18, 2006. 9:57 PMspinach_dip says:
I know I can build the tray with anything, I'd probably go with a box with dividers from allelectronics. But...I have one box exactly as pictured above, and I'd like to get a bunch more
May 19, 2006. 6:57 AMradiorental says:
I agree, trying to think of a ready supply of such boxes. Like matchboxes or... hey, altoids tins! and you can ground them to make them anti static
May 20, 2006. 2:14 AMspinach_dip says:
Altoids tins would be good for the tray. You'd still need conductive foam since you want to keep all the IC leads at the same potential.
May 19, 2006. 12:38 PMklee27x says:
The most important part of the Maxim chip container is the high density conductive foam. Where do you get this stuff cheap/free?
May 19, 2006. 7:12 AMprank says:
cool project! If I make one too, could we 'trayd' them sometime? hyuk hyuk ah, well good times
May 17, 2006. 5:20 PMradiorental says:
nice project tray, well thought out. and on/off switch near the plugs might be a useful addtion?

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Author:mmt
Class of 2007, undergraduate at MIT. Living at http://xi.tep.org ; working at http://csail.mit.edu and playing at http://miters.mit.edu