DFRobot
Terminal Block Shield for Arduino
The Terminal Block Shield for Arduino replaces loose jumper wires with secure screw-terminal connections, making your wiring stable and reliable. Each Arduin...
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The Terminal Block Shield for Arduino replaces loose jumper wires with secure screw-terminal connections, making your wiring stable and reliable. Each Arduino pin is broken out to a 3.5 mm pitch terminal block, and multiple 3.3V, 5V, and GND ports are provided for convenient power distribution.
The shield accepts 7–24V DC input without requiring an additional buck converter, and its taller pin headers allow it to stack with the Arduino Uno Ethernet Shield and similar boards. It supports wire sizes from 26 AWG to 16 AWG.
Key Features
- Screw-Terminal Connections – Secure, vibration-resistant wiring for every Arduino pin
- Multiple Power Ports – Several 3.3V, 5V, and GND terminals for easy distribution
- 7–24V DC Input – Wide voltage range with no external buck converter needed
- 3.5 mm Terminal Block Pitch – Accepts 26–16 AWG wire (5 mm strip length)
- Stackable Design – Taller pin headers for compatibility with Ethernet Shield and other shields
- Max Load Power – 10W
- Dimensions – 68.6 × 53.3 mm
Ideal For
- Permanent installations and commercial projects
- Art installations and exhibitions
- Any Arduino project where reliable wiring is critical
Package Contents
- 1× Terminal Block Shield for Arduino
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- AWG
- American Wire Gauge is a numbering system for wire thickness, where a lower number means a thicker wire. The AWG rating matters because thicker wire can usually carry more current with less voltage drop and heating.
- Buck converter
- A power circuit that reduces a higher DC voltage to a lower DC voltage. It is useful when your supply voltage is too high for a module or microcontroller and you want less heat and better efficiency than a simple linear regulator.
- DC
- DC means direct current, where electricity flows in one constant direction, as supplied by batteries, USB ports and many plug-pack power supplies. When a product specifies DC, it runs from a DC supply rather than mains AC, so you need to provide the correct voltage and polarity.
- GND
- GND is the ground or reference connection (0 V) for a circuit. When connecting two devices together, their grounds must be joined so both agree on what counts as a low or high signal.
- 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.
- Shield
- An add-on board that plugs into a main controller board to give it extra features such as sensing, motor control or communication. Knowing a product supports shields helps you judge whether it can connect neatly into an existing maker-board setup.
- Terminal block
- A terminal block is a connector that joins wires together in a neat, removable, or serviceable way, usually clamping each wire under a screw or spring instead of soldering. It makes it easier to connect, change, or service wiring without permanent joints.
Find this product in
Brands
Supplier page — dfrobot.com
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DFR0920 terminal block shield ce V1.0
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DFR0920 terminal block shield rohs V1.0
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DFR0920 terminal block shield schematics V1.0
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Resources & Downloads
Guides, code examples, and more
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au