Adafruit
Premium Female/Female Jumper Wires - 20 x 3 (75mm)
These premium female-to-female jumper wires are ideal for making wire harnesses or connecting between headers on PCBs. Each pack contains 20 wires in a ribbo...
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These premium female-to-female jumper wires are ideal for making wire harnesses or connecting between headers on PCBs. Each pack contains 20 wires in a ribbon cable format — two of each of ten rainbow colours — that can be kept together for organised harnesses or separated into individual jumpers.
Each wire is 75 mm long with 2.54 mm pitch female header contacts on both ends, fitting cleanly next to each other on standard-pitch headers.
Key Features
- Female-to-Female Connectors – 2.54 mm pitch female header contacts on both ends
- Ribbon Cable Format – 20 wires in a separable ribbon for tidy wiring or individual use
- Colour-Coded – 10 rainbow colours, 2 wires per colour
- Standard Pitch – Compatible with 2.54 mm (0.1") header pins
Specifications
- Wire Length – 75 mm (actual length may vary slightly)
- Connector Type – Female header, both ends
- Pitch – 2.54 mm
- Quantity – 20 wires per pack
Ideal For
- Breadboard prototyping and header-to-header connections
- Organised wire harnesses in electronics projects
- Connecting breakout boards and sensor modules
Package Contents
- 1× Pack of 20 premium female/female jumper wires (75 mm, ribbon cable format)
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- breakout
- A breakout board carries a small or fine-pitched component and brings its connections out to standard, breadboard- and header-friendly pins. Describing a part as a breakout means it can be wired into a project without soldering directly to the component's tiny contacts.
- Headers
- Rows of connector contacts on a fixed pitch (commonly 2.54 mm) used to link a board to a breadboard, jumper wires, or another board. They come as male pin headers and female socket headers; when a module ships with pre-soldered headers it can be used straight away, whereas bare pads require soldering the pins yourself.
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Brands
Prototyping & Wiring
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au