Zerogee
Clencher's Bogleman

Most of the Massoth decoders have extensions to each end of their circuit boards, partly to provide mounting holes for screw fixings, and partly because that is where the labelling for the connections is; however their instruction booklets all say that if you are mounting the decoder in a very restricted space, these extensions may be "snapped" (their word) off to reduce the overall size of the unit.
Naturally, I'm very wary of snapping bits off a piece of kit that costs over £100 - but for one application I have in mind (hiding an "S" module inside the little coal bunker of a Field Railway steamer) it is necessary to make it fit - and as Massoth specifically mention it, I assume that it must work? My best guess would be to put a good pair of pliers right up to the cut line, and then gently snap it while praying profusely to the Gods of Modelling...? Or do you cut it with a sharp pair of snips or something? Does the board need to be scored before snapping it, or is there already an etched groove already there?
So, has anyone here actually done this, and if so how did you go about it? I suspect several of the answers I get will be along the lines of "very, very carefully"....
Jon.
Naturally, I'm very wary of snapping bits off a piece of kit that costs over £100 - but for one application I have in mind (hiding an "S" module inside the little coal bunker of a Field Railway steamer) it is necessary to make it fit - and as Massoth specifically mention it, I assume that it must work? My best guess would be to put a good pair of pliers right up to the cut line, and then gently snap it while praying profusely to the Gods of Modelling...? Or do you cut it with a sharp pair of snips or something? Does the board need to be scored before snapping it, or is there already an etched groove already there?
So, has anyone here actually done this, and if so how did you go about it? I suspect several of the answers I get will be along the lines of "very, very carefully"....

Jon.