Electrocomponents kitbash is a practical set of electrical parts and workbench pieces that fits naturally into electronics-heavy scenes. It combines component groups, small support items, connected breadboard wires, and board blueprints for LED animation, so the collection can support both detailed prop dressing and functional-looking setup work.
Boards, modules, chips, and the rest of the component set
The core of the collection is the electronics inventory itself. It includes boards, modules, chips, condensers, fuses, gas dischargers, inductive parts, and resistors. The set is organized into clearly defined groups, with 9 boards, 45 modules, 60 chips, 39 condensers, 20 fuses, 30 gas dischargers, 30 inductive elements, and 30 resistors.
Together, those categories add up to 278 elements. That makes the package useful when a scene needs a busy technical tabletop rather than a single isolated prop. The pieces can be combined into a bench layout, arranged as a repair station, or placed as part of a prototype setup where multiple small components need to be visible at once.
The set is not limited to the core electronics parts. It also includes a table, stool, loupe, layout mat, power socket, prototyping board, soldering iron, two tools, and mounting wire for connection on the breadboard. These extras help turn the collection into a more complete working environment instead of a loose assortment of parts.
Electrocomponents kitbash on a workbench
The included support items make the collection suitable for a production workflow that needs an electronics bench already in place. A table and stool establish the working area. A loupe, soldering iron, tools, and layout mat reinforce the feeling of hands-on assembly. The power socket and prototyping board add more of the practical structure that belongs in a setup where components are being tested or connected.
The mounting wire for breadboard connection is especially important for scenes that need visible signal routing. Instead of leaving the electronics pieces disconnected, the set already accounts for wiring between elements on the breadboard. That makes it easier to show an active project layout with components tied together in a believable way.
Because the collection includes these bench accessories along with the electronic parts, it works well when the goal is to build a complete workstation view. The scene can read as a place where someone is assembling, checking, or organizing components rather than a generic storage display.
PBR materials, standard material setup, and texture maps
The material setup is straightforward and focused on practical use. The collection includes 9 PBR materials, and the textures are provided in 1K to 4K resolution. Standard material is used to apply textures to the models. The material maps listed for the set are Albedo, Metallic, and Normal.
There are 36 materials in total and 64 texture maps. Those numbers point to a fairly detailed material library for the components and support items included here. For production work, that means the visual treatment is already separated into usable material elements rather than requiring a custom rebuild of each part from scratch.
The texture range from 1K to 4K gives the collection a flexible presentation across different prop scales within the same scene. Smaller pieces can sit inside a larger workbench arrangement, while still keeping enough material detail to hold up in closer views.
Built for use without extra software requirements
No plug-ins or other software are required for working with the models. That keeps the set easy to bring into a project pipeline where the focus is on assembly, placement, and scene dressing rather than on setting up additional tools first.
The package also adds wires for connecting elements on the breadboard through Blueprint spline mesh constructions. On top of that, there are blueprints on the boards for animating LEDs. Those details point to a workflow where the electronics scene can move beyond static props and into a more active presentation, with visible wiring and light animation already supported at the board level.
Breadboard connections and LED animation
The breadboard wiring and board blueprints are the most workflow-specific parts of the collection. The wires are already prepared for connecting elements on the breadboard, and the spline mesh construction makes the routing feel organized rather than improvised. That is useful when the scene needs a clear connection path between components.
The LED animation blueprints on the boards add another layer of activity. They make the boards useful for situations where the electronics need to look powered or in progress. Instead of relying on a completely static presentation, the collection gives a path toward a more animated technical display.
That combination of wires and blueprints makes the set well suited to prototype tables, electronics labs, or repair spaces where the visual emphasis is on working hardware. The parts are not isolated as separate display items; they are set up to read as an interconnected system.
For production, the main strength of Electrocomponents kitbash is its readiness for a complete electronics tabletop. The mix of components, bench props, material setup, breadboard wiring, and LED animation support gives it a clear place in scenes that need a technical workspace with visible activity.
Tags associated with the collection point to the same direction: Electronic, Chip, Integrated, Resistor, Technique, Technology, Pack, and Electro.
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