Fahnestock clip


A Fahnestock clip is an early type of spring clamp
It consists of a single flat piece of springy metal, bent over itself to form a clip. Pushing down on the end of the metal tab opens a hole through which a bare or
Fahnestock clips were commonly made of
-plated.
Fahnestock clips were seen on early radio receiver breadboard construction, model train power connections, and the like. They were also available on early dry batteries.[5] Today, they have largely been supplanted by binding posts. However, they remain in use in elementary schools especially, where their ease of use and visible connections make them a popular way for science instructors to teach the creation of simple circuits, and most university physics departments still have them on apparatus.[citation needed]
Fahnestock clips are also used as safety devices on the arming wires of aircraft bombs; their grip on smooth bare steel wire is sufficient to prevent the wire from being withdrawn from a fuze during normal handling but light enough to allow the wire to be withdrawn when the weapon is released.[6]
References
- ^ US patent 0845268, John Schade, "SPRING TERMINAL-CLIP", issued February 26, 1907
- ^ US patent RE12642, John Schade, "SPRING TERMINAL-CLIP", issued March 11, 1907
- ^ United States. Patent Office (1907). Official gazette of the United States Patent Office. The Office. pp. 3187–. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
- ISBN 9780911572964. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
- ^ The American Telephone Journal. 1905. pp. 638–.
- ^ "MIL-HDBK-145". US DOD. Retrieved June 8, 2014.