Banana to Banana Cables

These are various leaded cables for attaching to multimeters, power supplies, oscilloscopes, function generators, etc. Cables come in red/black pairs.

  • 36" Long

Banana to Banana Cables Product Help and Resources

How to Use a Multimeter

January 9, 2015

Learn the basics of using a multimeter to measure continuity, voltage, resistance and current.

Connector Basics

January 18, 2013

Connectors are a major source of confusion for people just beginning electronics. The number of different options, terms, and names of connectors can make selecting one, or finding the one you need, daunting. This article will help you get a jump on the world of connectors.

Comments

Looking for answers to technical questions?

We welcome your comments and suggestions below. However, if you are looking for solutions to technical questions please see our Technical Assistance page.

  • Member #113889 / about 12 years ago / 3

    The set of these I got a while ago are spectacularly bad. The plugs are just too loose in any socket to be of utility.

    But hey, the cable will be fine once paired with some better stackable plugs.

  • Zbig / about 11 years ago / 2

    Don't bother - the quality is terrible. They're to loose and once you try to correct it, the "spring" contacts which are cut from extremely thin sheet metal wrapped around the solid metal prong get hopelessly bent out of shape and they lack any "springiness" whatsoever. There is some restriction designed in against "squashing" the contact spring part by not allowing it to expand in its length but they blew it by leaving some 1 mm gap in there. Not only are these plugs loose in the sockets, the thin sheet metal contacts also have their fair amount of play on the prong itself so the overall current carrying capacity goes down the drain. And the cables themselves are very stiff. It's mind boggling how they managed to find so many ways to get such a ridiculously simple thing wrong. The very last thing you want from your banana cable is having to wiggle it for 5 minutes, arcing galore, before managing to get a "good" connection and then to not look at it funny in the fear of the connection going bad. Or maybe asking someone to apply a constant amount of pressure in the just right direction with their finger. You could probably get these from "leading auction service" for a dollar a dozen with free shipping but I'd still advise against. Good thing I only wasted $9.90 on these and "Banana to IC hook" instead of getting one of each combinations offered here.

    Oh, did I mention just how hopeless they are?

  • kooth / about 10 years ago / 1

    I just got mine about four weeks ago. Seems OK!

  • Member #257676 / about 13 years ago / 1

    These are great! My mpja power supply came with some low quality banana-gator clips, these were really nice in comparison. Also there is a hole in the base and side of each plug that you can jam more banana plugs into. neat!

    • Zbig / about 11 years ago * / 2

      Ugh, so apparently there's just no limit on how bad these could get. This makes me sad.

  • It is currently 20 AWG, stranded.

  • driquelme / about 13 years ago / 1

    Hi, anyone knows the gauge on this things ?

  • Member #86011 / about 13 years ago / 1

    What wire gauge?

  • Each is 36" long.

  • ddd999 / about 14 years ago / 1

    Are these 36" each or 18"+18"?

Customer Reviews

3 out of 5

Based on 2 ratings:

Currently viewing all customer reviews.

1 of 1 found this helpful:

Not very good banana cables

Connectors mated fine to power supplies, cables are very flexible and easy to work around. Problem is wire is thin, anything over ~50 mA and you start getting significant voltage drop. For light loads these are fine, otherwise recommend pomona electronics cheap banana cables on digikey, still twice the cost of these.

Banana Cables

Nice product but fairly small (20g?) gauge wire. For my use, I would prefer if it had 14g - 16g.