Topic: Two wires to one connection, or 45-degree connection?

Sometimes a circuit requires two parallel wires going between two nodes. One way this is represented is seen in the attached image. The ground connection is made by two wires in parallel (PA10 and PA9). The diagram represents this with one wire connected to the battery connector at 90 degrees, and the other wire connected at 45 degrees (or, as seen at the ground symbol, both wires enter at 45 degrees).

Is it possible to replicate this type of drawing with QET? If so, how? I haven't been able to figure it out so far. If not, are there any alternative methods that you could suggest to represent two wires attached to the same post?

Post's attachments

Annotation 2019-09-23 141709.png, 21.12 kb, 722 x 626
Annotation 2019-09-23 141709.png 21.12 kb, 227 downloads since 2019-09-23 

2 (edited by Calypso 2019-09-24 06:42:27)

Re: Two wires to one connection, or 45-degree connection?

Hello,

you can create your own elements, these must have the property as a terminal strip in the element editor so that the conductor properties can be continued.

With best regards


Stebo

Post's attachments

image.png, 2.17 kb, 542 x 114
image.png 2.17 kb, 248 downloads since 2019-09-24 

Re: Two wires to one connection, or 45-degree connection?

https://download.qelectrotech.org/qet/forum_img/test11.png

"Le jour où tu découvres le Libre, tu sais que tu ne pourras jamais plus revenir en arrière..."

Re: Two wires to one connection, or 45-degree connection?

Thanks for the workaround suggestions! 

I made a custom part after posting just to keep moving forward. I think I prefer the terminal-strip elements idea (thanks Stebo). That way I wouldn't need to make 1-, 2-, and 3- terminal versions of many different parts.