Left: 20-way grey ribbon cable with wire no. 1 marked red, insulation partly stripped. Right: 16-way rainbow ribbon with IDC connector. For the 300-ohm antenna cable, see Twin-lead. A ribbon cable (also known as multi-wire planar cable) is a cable with many conducting wires running parallel to each other on the same flat plane. As a result the cable is wide and flat rather than round. Its name comes from the resemblance of the cable to a piece of ribbon (which is likewise wide and flat). Ribbon cables (grey stripped, and rainbow with IDC connector). ...
Ribbon cables (grey stripped, and rainbow with IDC connector). ...
An insulation displacement connector or Insulation piercing connector is a connector that pierces the insulation on a wire to make the connection removing the need to strip the wire before connecting. ...
Twin-lead is a two-conductor ribbon cable of 300 ohms characteristic impedance commonly used as a transmission line for balanced connection of television antennas to their receiving antennas. ...
A ribbon is a thin band of flexible material, typically cloth but also plastic or sometimes metal, used primarily for binding and tying. ...
Ribbon cables are commonly seen for internal peripherals in computers, such as hard drives, CD drives and floppy drives. On some older computer systems (such as the BBC Micro) they were commonly used for external connections as well. Unfortunately the ribbon like shape makes them awkward to handle especially when there are a lot of them and so round cables have almost entirely replaced ribbon cables for external connections. The NASA Columbia Supercomputer. ...
Typical hard drives of the mid-1990s. ...
The CD-ROM (an abbreviation for Compact Disc Read-Only Memory) is a non-volatile optical data storage medium using the same physical format as audio CDs, readable by a computer with a CD-ROM drive. ...
A floppy disk is a data storage device that comprises a circular piece of thin, flexible (hence floppy) magnetic storage medium encased in a square or rectangular plastic wallet. ...
The BBC Microcomputer System was a series of microcomputers and associated peripherals designed and built by Acorn Computers Ltd for the BBC Computer Literacy Project operated by the British Broadcasting Corporation. ...
Color-coding
To reduce the risk of reversed connections (which could potentially damage hardware) either when making a cable or when using a cable with non polarised connectors one edge of the cable is usually marked with a red stripe. By convention the edge with the stripe is connected to pin 1 on the connector. This method of identification is fine for cables which just consist of two or more IDC connectors with every connector connecting to every wire but is somewhat less helpfull when individual wires or small groups of wires must be terminated separately. To make it easier to identify individual conductors in a cable; ribbon cable manufacturers introduced rainbow ribbon cables which uses a repeating pattern of colors borrowed from the standard resistor color code (Brown is pin 1 or pin 11 or pin 21 etc. Red is pin 2 or pin 12 or pin 22 etc). However this has remained a specialized and relatively expensive product. Electronic color codes are used to indicate the values or ratings of electronic components, near-universally for resistors, but also for capacitors, inductors, and others. ...
Cable sizes Ribbon cables are usually specified by two numbers: the spacing or pitch of the conductors, and the number of conductors or ways. Conventionally a spacing of 0.05 inch (1.27 mm) was the norm allowing for a two row connector with a pin spacing of 0.1 inch (2.54 mm). This size is still used today in floppy cables and older or custom Parallel ATA cables as well as many more specialist applications. ATA cables: 40 wire ribbon cable top, 80 wire ribbon cable bottom Advanced Technology Attachment (ATA) is a standard interface for connecting storage devices such as hard disks and CD-ROM drives inside personal computers. ...
The high-speed ATA cable used for ULTRA-ATA 66 and above has 0.025 inch (0.64 mm) pitch and 80 ways. The 40 pin connection is still used but with special connectors that ground every other wire in the 80 way cable. Finer pitches, as small as 0.3 mm, are found in portable electronic equipment such as laptops, however portable electronic equipment usually uses FFC(Flexible Flat Cables). Flexible Flat Cable, or FFC, refers to any variety of electrical cable that is both flat and flexible. ...
Cable connectors The main point of ribbon cables is to allow mass termination to specially designed insulation displacement connectors (IDC connectors) in which the ribbon cable is forced onto a row of sharp forked contacts. (The phrase "IDC connector" is widely used, even though it is redundant - an example of RAS syndrome.) Most commonly this is done at both ends of the cable though sometimes (for example when making a lead that needs to change wiring between the two connectors) only one end will be IDC terminated with the other end being terminated in a regular crimp or solder bucket connection. Although it is sometimes possible to dismantle and re-use IDC connectors, they are not designed to allow this. Katie now nothin an think she nos all An insulation displacement connector or Insulation piercing connector is a connector that pierces the insulation on a wire to make the connection removing the need to strip the wire before connecting. ...
RAS syndrome (Redundant Acronym Syndrome syndrome) is a common tendency to use one of the words which make up an acronym or initialism as well as the abbreviation itself, thus in effect repeating that word. ...
Crimp or crimping can mean: Crimp (gambling) Crimp (wool) Crimp (joining) Crimp (recruitment) Crimp (climbing) Grain crimping Hair crimping Crimping Pliers This is a disambiguation page â a list of articles associated with the same title. ...
Popular types of connectors available with IDC termination suitable for ribbon cable include: - BT224 connector - also defined by BS9525-F0023, DIN41651, MIL-C-83503 standards; these are the type used on ATA cables and are often simply called "IDC connectors". They mate with either a purpose-made plug or a two-row grid of header pins with 0.1 inch (2.54 mm) spacing.
- D-subminiature connector - used for serial ports and printer ports (however IDC D connectors are far less common than crimp and solder bucket types).
- DIN41612 connector - used for Eurocard buses.
- PCB transition headers - has two rows of pins with the same spacings as BT244 connectors. Intended to be soldered directly into a PCB.
- DIL headers - Has pins with the same spacings as standard DIL ICs. Generally used where for some reason it is desired to replace an IC with a connection to an external device (e.g. in-circuit emulators). Can also be used like a PCB transition header especially on stripboard. (Fitting a standard spacing header to stripboard is tricky because you have to cut the tracks between two holes rather than on a hole.)
It has been suggested that DE-9 be merged into this article or section. ...
Eurocard is a European standard format for PCB cards, which can be plugged together into a standardized subrack. ...
ICs in DIP14-Package Several PDIPs and CERDIPS. The large CERDIP in the foreground is an 8080 processor. ...
An in-circuit emulator (ICE) also called on-circuit debugger (OCD) or background debug module (BDM) is a hardware device used to debug the software of an embedded system. ...
Veroboard is the trademark name of the electronics prototyping board manufactured by the Vero Electronics company. ...
See also |