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LOL Ian! Buss means "a kiss", or a Buss is also a brand name of an electrical fuse.Bus (one "s") is either a road vehicle or one or more electrical conductors carrying electricity. I don't knwo why people think that they need to use 2 esses when describing the electrical bus. Makes me want to roll my eyes.
Sometimes you just need to just let common usage slide like us LEOs not having a hissy fit over the media falsely using the term "clocked"when talking about RADAR.
I can't believe I'm defending the media, and I'm certainly not defending the criticism for using "buss". (I've never heard it used as a term for kiss, much less commonly used as such...I simply look at it as a typo and nothing more.)
You can throw all the dictionaries in the world at me and it won't change the fact that I've never heard that word with that spelling used to describe a kiss. Anyway, I think it's obvious that the BUSS electrical components has probably created this trend. Honestly, it wouldn't be the end of the world if that term got adopted. I know, blasphemy...
You can all buss my !
...like us LEOs not having a hissy fit over the media falsely using the term "clocked"when talking about RADAR.
I was gonna post some useful info about stranded wire,but it'll just get lost..And I might make a typeo..
...don't the displacement blades cut through the main wire?
"...3M Scotch Lock IDC Suitcase connectors............they're removable..." ---- don't the displacement blades cut through the main wire? and wouldn't removing the suitcase connector be he same as simply cutting the bus it was connected to? or am I missing something???I use suitcase connectors for connecting feeders to the bus. If, for any reason, I no longer need the feeder wires, I snip them off at the suitcase connector but I leave the connector on the bus
If you look at the underside shot of the depot module above, you'll notice a very similar methodology of a sub-bus. The bundle along the top is the main layout bus wiring. Then the terminal block, which aids trouble shooting without clipping wires. Then off the terminal block come the sub-bus wiring which leads to all the individual feeders. It's funny what concerns whom, you don't want mechanical terminal blocks but are ok with scotch locks. I am anal about soldering and shrink wrapping every connection but then use terminal blocks. My other bad practice is the jumpers between modules. I hate wiring that hangs down during transport, and don't want to have to tie up the ends. So I leave it short and put female plugs on each end of the module. Then I make one foot long jumpers with two male ends. Twice as many electrical connectors as needed, but I love pulling the jumpers off and tossing them in a bag, never to get snagged during transport.
Doug, see http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/buss, and http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/busWhile a typo seems like a good excuse (from both posters), I often see people use buss while trying to describe a group of electrical conductors. It might be something to do with people with no electronic background thinking that a word describing a vehicle must not be the same as the one describing a group of electrical conductors. Some probably have also seen the electric Buss fuses, associating the double-s word with electricity, thus they incorrectly thinking that the double-s word must be correct for describing the electrical bus.All I did was to show the correct usage of each word, and I got yelled at.