You are using beta.rapidonline.com. For the live site go to rapidonline.com
How cookies can improve your experience
We use cookies on our website to ensure you get the best possible experience – they allow us to tailor content specifically to you, analyse our website to help make improvements, and display ads that are applicable to you across other websites. If you’re happy with this, please select “Allow all", or personalise the cookies you allow with “Manage”. Clicking on “Reject non-essential” will remove these cookies, but the site may not function to its best abilities. For more information, please visit our cookie policy
Standard 6-pole PCB mounting switch which can easily be adjusted to momentary or latching action as required. The polycarbonate housing has PCB pins fixed on the top face and solder terminals on the underside.
Q. I will use this switches on an organ pedalboard. When the pedal is pressed, the switch goes down and when the pedal is released, the switch goes up. So, what type of switch (Non-lock or self lock) should I buy? What is the "travel to lock"? Thanks
A. Hi nmarques. Thank you for your question. You would require a momentary version switch and the selected version can be used in either way but you will require this to be set as a momentary. 78-0501 will be suitable.
Q. What is the difference between a "non-lock" version and a "self lock" version of this switch? Thanks
A. Hi nmarques. Thank you for your question. Non lock means it springs back to previous position after you let go. Self locking means it stays put after pressing...press again to release.
Q. Is there a way to mechanically link several of these switches together in such way that when one is pressed in the others pop out, so that only one is ever pushed in at a time?
e.g. like an input selector for audio sources
A. Thanks for your enquiry Jonathan. No is the simple answer as these require mechanical force to operate them.
Reviews
Good quality multipole switch
Reviewed by: Christopher Hunter - Friday, April 6, 2018
I needed a switch to change several setting simultaneously in an audio processor unit that I was prototyping. This switch will be good enough for the finished production version. It's easy to clean, can be configured as push-on / push-off or momentary and is reasonably priced. I also like the way that it can be either connected to a PCB, using the pin terminals, or can be hard-wired using the tags.