Hi,
Thanks for the reply guys I'm new here, and boy you guys are fast.
Regarding #1, accomplishing it is not a new feat, my first idea was to use interlocking bricks as in LEGO-like construction, I websurfed around and found some ideas close to mine, but did not share the same scope: Brixo and SBrick among them. So I thought the idea of an interlocking solderless prototyping tool was still not out there, and went along the project, until I chatted with a lancer about the project and he started popping four links to projects with similar tones. I quickly dismissed three but one was right on the mark: 5eboard (amazing what a google search with diferrent keywords can bring). I ordered two kits from them to check them out, I'm surprised I haven't come across or heard about these guys before. So there you have it. Though my project now after working with the lancer does not have any interlocking feature and uses mostly metal parts, it's gone through a very big transformation but still fulfills:
"1) more convenient construction, hopefully more orderly construction and less ratnests".
As for #2, This tool of mine allows for the insertion, removal and connection of component leads and wires (hence circuits are constructed). Component leads and wires would "hover over" a metal plane, they would be close but not touch the metal plane. This metal plane is also connected to the circuit as it acts as 0 V (GND), which allows coupling between each wire and this ground plane. I have NDA-terms in the contract with my lancers so I can't spill the beans of my idea, not that it's that good anyway.
Anyway, the setup would allow for free-form design, so wires and components can be laid out according to RF circuit construction concerns. The product brochure (or manual) would also give instructions to end-users relating to these concerns; wire lengths, distance between wires, orientation, etc. Well hopefully that is what I aim to do.
The tool is for through-hole components, SMD components are not in my scope. This of course places a limitation on the upper frequency and power the tool can be taken up to.
Back to my project scope:
Guys: 1) would 5A out of 220Vac 60 Hz seem like a good maximum limit to strive for?
ataradov: 2) this pdf
http://www.vishay.com/docs/95222/to220ab.pdf, shows lead pitch is 0.1 inches (give or take manufacturing tolerence I suppose), which is typical breadboard pin spacing, if this is the component sizes most people work with than it will simplify my project. I saw a picture some time ago of a huge diode and just thought that that's the size hobbyists in this field work with, was I wrong?
SvanGool: 3) you mentioned <40V environment, where did this number come from?