Your project has come to a stand still. Your brain has come to a dead end... you can't remember that specific connection that'd you had once seen- which would be perfect for your application... it's all you need to get to the finish line...
It's a joint where 1 side rotates and the other is the base. An electronic signal, power needs to go through there but you can't just use a cable or wires... the thing rotates 360 degrees if not till infinity. A cable/ physical wire would wind itself till it'd snap/ break/ cause a short... you've seen it before- a electronic connector that incorporates itself into the rotating section. You know what it looks like, but not the name of it.... Google searching is frivolous.
No problem! Because to your rescue, we have the amazing resource which is Connector Book found at https://connectorbook.com/
You can search by image/ photo... by identification, by brand, by logo... and every and any electronic connection is contained in this extensive resource- there are even non- electrical connectors- on the lines of different RF connections as an example.
Feel free to leave a comment with your guess or if you've located the connection type I'd described above.
Mostly for me to remember, but Windows at times has a lapse in judgement with certain devices, DIY gadgets, peripherals that you maybe trying to connect to- for me, it was my HackRF( I have since stumbled upon a better way to start for the HackF if having driver woes- which I will cover in another post- but keep reading, since this is still good knowledge to know regarding driver issues )- no matter what, my PC could not recognize the HackRF/ or would recognize it, but as a keyboard. I required Windows to apply the correct drivers to the device so that it could be recognized for what it is... a...SDR. A HackRF. Guessing What's Right... Making Assumptions. Getting it Wrong. So, really what we see here is that when connecting that never connected before thing into your PC, Windows is making an assumption on what that thing is, and then applying the best driver that it thinks suites that thing... From experience, and a general rule of life... "assumptions" aren't the b...
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