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A "spudger" may also refer to an [[orangewood]] stick, used in electronics assembly and [[soldering]] because of their heat tolerance and dense grain. The same orangewood sticks are commonly used in [[Filming#Stages of filmmaking|filmmaking]] and [[manicure]]/[[pedicure]], but these industries do not use the term spudger.
A "spudger" may also refer to an [[orangewood]] stick, used in electronics assembly and [[soldering]] because of their heat tolerance and dense grain. The same orangewood sticks are commonly used in [[Filming#Stages of filmmaking|filmmaking]] and [[manicure]]/[[pedicure]], but these industries do not use the term spudger.


The spudger is also called a '''non-marring nylon black stick tool''' or simply '''black stick''' in [[Apple Computer]] repair manuals, where it is the recommended tool for prying apart [[iBook]], [[MacBook]], and [[MacBook Pro]] enclosures. It is used for keyboard removal and LCD disassembly by many laptop manufacturers.
The spudger is also called a '''non-marring nylon black stick tool''' or simply '''black stick''' in [[Apple Computer]] repair manuals, where it is the recommended tool for prying apart [[iBook]], [[MacBook]], [[MacBook Pro]], and [[iPad]] enclosures. It is used for keyboard removal and LCD disassembly by many laptop manufacturers.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 14:47, 5 April 2010

Spudgers

The term spudger (sometimes called spludger) describes a general class of wiring tools used for poking or adjusting small wires or components, generally in the electronics or telecommunications industries.

The most common spudger is a black or yellow nylon stick, with a bent metal hook at one end.[1] Various versions have blunt, sharpened, or insulated hooks. The hook can be used for pulling bridge clips from 66 blocks, manipulating wires in a crowded wire wrap block, or setting DIP switches. The body of a plastic spudger is usually contoured to offer a better grip.

A "spudger" may also refer to an orangewood stick, used in electronics assembly and soldering because of their heat tolerance and dense grain. The same orangewood sticks are commonly used in filmmaking and manicure/pedicure, but these industries do not use the term spudger.

The spudger is also called a non-marring nylon black stick tool or simply black stick in Apple Computer repair manuals, where it is the recommended tool for prying apart iBook, MacBook, MacBook Pro, and iPad enclosures. It is used for keyboard removal and LCD disassembly by many laptop manufacturers.

See also

References

  1. ^ Hometech Products Twisted Pair Spudger Tool