Pololu
0.100 (2.54 mm) Female Header: 1x8-Pin, Right-Angle
The 0.100″ (2.54 mm) 1×8-Pin Right-Angle Female Header provides a reliable perpendicular connection point for standard 0.1″ pitch male headers. Its right-ang...
The 0.100″ (2.54 mm) 1×8-Pin Right-Angle Female Header provides a reliable perpendicular connection point for standard 0.1″ pitch male headers. Its right-angle orientation is ideal for low-profile builds or board-edge connections where vertical clearance is limited.
This single-row, 8-pin socket header is well suited for interfacing with SPI buses, display modules, sensor breakouts, and other peripherals that use an 8-pin header arrangement.
Key Features
- 0.1″ (2.54 mm) Pitch – Industry-standard spacing compatible with breadboards and perfboard
- Right-Angle Orientation – Mounts parallel to the PCB for low-profile or edge connections
- 1×8-Pin Configuration – Single-row, 8-position socket
- Through-Hole Mounting – Solders directly to standard PCBs
Ideal For
- SPI and display module connections
- Sensor and peripheral breakout boards
- Low-profile enclosure builds
- Prototyping and custom wiring harnesses
Package Contents
- 1× 0.100″ (2.54 mm) 1×8-Pin Right-Angle Female Header
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- breakout
- A breakout is a small circuit board that makes a tiny or hard-to-solder component easier to connect to with standard pins. It matters because this OLED module can be wired into a microcontroller project without needing to solder directly to the display’s fine contacts.
- Headers
- Rows of metal pins used to plug a module into a breadboard or connect it with jumper wires. Pre-soldered headers make the module easier to use straight away without needing to solder the pins yourself.
- PCB
- A printed circuit board is a rigid board with copper tracks that connect electronic parts without loose wires. For this kit, the PCBs also form the airplane shape, so they are both the circuit base and part of the finished model.
- SPI
- A fast serial communication bus often used for displays, memory cards, and sensors. It matters because SPI devices need specific pins for clock and data, plus a separate chip-select line for each device.
Find this product in
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au