Mike said:
Early on in mechanical design I looked at the possibility of using flat
flex cable. Problem is I didn't have the space to get it to turn on two
axes. I understand the principle of giving it two places to rotate - I just
don't have the space for it.
I think any of the discrete-wire small rectangular connectors are
"pretty good" in terms of flexibility. And you get wiggle room in any
dimension, unlike the flexible-PCB cables. You don't get the
umpteen-bazillion cycles of operation that the flexible PCB's give you,
but the may well outlast your mechanism

. These are available not
just in 0.1" pitch but also 2mm and 1.5mm and 1.25mm.
For the smaller sizes of discrete-wire connectors, you really DO need
the "correct" crimper. Otherwise you do not get the wire crimp or the
insulation crimp correct. The correct crimp tool will set you back
several hundred dollars. Without the right crimp tool, you will not get
the crimp right. With the 1.25mm pitch ones there's no way any
hardware-store crimper is gonna do the crimp right - the 1/8" width of
those tools completely dwarfs the proper crimp.
The IDC ribbon cable fine-pitch connectors are much more easily
attachable without a multi-hundred-dollar crimp tool. But you might not
get all the flexibility in all axes that you desire.
Unlike the others I recommend AGAINST kludging these up with hot glue
or silicon or heat shrink as a "strain relief". All these will do is
concentrate the strain at the end of the "relief" and guarantee a wire
break there, and give you less overall length to flex. A properly
crimped discrete wire gets the CORRECT amount of strain relief from the
insulation crimp and the connector housing.
And of course with the smaller pitches you do NOT get to use wire any
thicker than 24AWG. If you are powering motors then you might not be
able to carry enough current over such skinny wires (usually they're
rated at 1Amp and I would personally consider that optimistic). If you
get up to the couple amps of current arena, then I highly recommend
that you make enough area on your PCB's for Waldom Micro-Fit connectors
or AMP Mini-Universal Mate-N-Locks which give you 5 to 9Amps of current
per circuit (and let you use appropriately sized wire, like 16AWG.)
Tim.