Introduction: Easy to Make LED W/resistor for Solderless Breadboards

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There is hardly a project that doesn't require some LEDs. When prototyping, you often need some LEDs for indication and troubleshooting. Of course, each LED needs a current limiting resistor. Therefore, putting these two components into one single package is logical and very useful. I tried cutting one of the LED's legs short and soldering a resistor in its place, but the assembly was just too fragile to be very useful. After some head scratching, I came up with this solution:

Step 1
Gather your parts:
  • 5 pin male header
  • 500 ohm resistor (or whatever size you want)
  • LED
Step 2
Cut off the three middle pins on the bottom (long) side. See photos.

Step 3
Bend pins of LED, soldering the cathode to the first two pins, and the anode to the next two pins. The cathode is usually the short lead and flat side of the LED body. I soldered the anode side first so as to not get confused. See photo.

Step 4
Solder the resistor between the anode and the remaining pin.

You're done now. The resistor is always connected to the positive which is the popular convention.

Features
  • Solid and robust
  • Easy and quick to make
  • Bridges from either the negative or positive rail onto the breadboard
Update:
Here is another instructable with even more 'pluggable' components. Includes:
  • Switches - tact & slide
  • 2.1mm DC jack
  • Trimpot
  • Bipolar transistors
  • SMD MOSFETs
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