USB pinout and wiring, instrukcje
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USB pinout and wiring @ pinouts.ru
USB connector pinout
computer bus specification
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USB (Universal Serial Bus) designed to connect peripherals
such as mice, keyboards, scanners, digital cameras, printers,
hard disks, and networking components to PC. It has become
the standard connection method for scanners, digital cameras
and for some printers. Complete pinout.
Universal Serial Bus (USB)
is a specification to establish
4 pin USB A / USB B /
mini-USB jack connector
at the controller
communication between devices and a host controller (usually
personal computers). An USB system consists of a host controller and
multiple devices connected in a tree-like fashion using special hub
devices. Hubs may be cascaded, up to 5 levels. Up to 127 devices
may be connected to a single host controller. USB can connect
computer peripherals such as mice, keyboards,
digital cameras
,
PDA
,
mobile phones
, printers,
personal media players
, flash drives,
GPS
,
Network Adapters, and
external hard drives
. For many of those
devices, USB has become the standard connection method.
4 pin USB A or USB B
plug connector
at the peripherals
USB interface aimed to remove the need for adding expansion cards
into the computer's
PCI
or
PCI-Express
bus, and improve
plug-and-play capabilities by allowing devices to be hot swapped or
added to the system without rebooting the computer.
The USB Pinout:
Cable
color
Pin Name
Description
1
VCC
Red
+5 VDC
2
D-
White
Data -
3
D+
Green
Data +
4
GND
Black
Ground
Pin x of mini-USB connector may be not connected, connected to
GND or used as attachment identification at some portable devices.
USB connectors
There are several types of USB connectors. The original USB
specification detailed Standard-A and Standard-B plugs and
receptacles. Nowdays there are 7 USB connectors known:
Standard-A, Standard-B,
Mini-A, Mini-B
,
Micro-A, Micro-AB, Micro-B
.
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USB pinout and wiring @ pinouts.ru
USB pinout signals
USB is a serial bus. It uses 4 shielded wires: two for power (+5v &
GND) and two for differential data signals (labelled as D+ and D- in
pinout). NRZI (Non Return to Zero Invert) encoding scheme used to
send data with a sync field to synchronise the host and receiver
clocks. In
USB data cable
Data+ and Data- signals are transmitted on
a twisted pair. No termination needed. Half-duplex differential signaling
helps to combat the effects of electromagnetic noise on longer lines.
Contrary to popular belief, D+ and D- operate together; they are not
separate simplex connections.
USB transfer modes
Univeral serial bus supports Control, Interrupt, Bulk and Isochronous
transfer modes.
USB transfer rates: Low Speed, Full Speed, Hi-speed.
When the new device first plugs in, the host enumerates it and loads
the device driver necessary to run it. The loading of the appropriate
driver is done using a PID/VID (Product ID/Vendor ID) combination
supplied by attached hardware. The USB host controllers has their
own specifications: UHCI (Universal Host Controller Interface), OHCI
(Open Host Controller Interface) with USB 1.1, EHCI (Enhanced Host
Controller Interface) is used with USB 2.0.
Related pinouts:
USB cable schematic
mini-USB connector
pinout
USB supports four data rates:
Low Speed (1.5 Mbit per second) that is mostly used for
Human Input Devices (HID) such as keyboards, mice, joysticks
and often the buttons on higher speed devices such as printers
or scanners;
Full Speed (12 Mbit per second) which is widely supported by
USB hubs, assumes that devices divide the USB bandwidth
between them in a first-come first-serve basis - it's easy to run
out of bandwidth with several devices;
Hi-Speed (480 Mbit per second) was added in USB 2.0
specification. Not all USB 2.0 devices are Hi-Speed.
SuperSpeed (USB 3.0) rate of 4800 Mbit/s (~572 MB/s).
A USB device must indicate its speed by pulling either the D+ or D-
line high to 3.3 volts. These pull up resistors at the device end will also
be used by the host or hub to detect the presence of a device
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connected to its port. Without a pull up resistor, USB assumes there is
nothing connected to the bus. The new USB 3.0 standard, supports an
extended speed of 4.8Gbit per second.
In order to help user to identify maximum speed of device, a USB
device often specify its speed on its cover with one of USB special
marketing logos.
USB Hi-speed devices
Hi-Speed devices should fall back to the slower data rate of Full
Speed when plugged into a Full Speed hub. Hi-Speed hubs have a
special function called the Transaction Translator that segregates Full
Speed and Low Speed bus traffic from Hi-Speed traffic.
USB powered devices
The USB connector provides a single 5 volt wire from which connected
USB devices may power themselves. A given segment of the bus is
specified to deliver up to 500 mA. This is often enough to power
several devices, although this budget must be shared among all
devices downstream of an unpowered hub. A bus-powered device
may use as much of that power as allowed by the port it is plugged
into.
Bus-powered hubs can continue to distribute the bus provided power
to connected devices but the USB specification only allows for a single
level of bus-powered devices from a bus-powered hub. This disallows
connection of a bus-powered hub to another bus-powered hub. Many
hubs include external power supplies which will power devices
connected through them without taking power from the bus. Devices
that need more than 500 mA or higher than 5 volts must provide their
own power.
When USB devices (including hubs) are first connected they are
interrogated by the host controller, which enquires of each their
maximum power requirements. However, seems that any load
connected to USB port may be treated by operating system as
device. The host operating system typically keeps track of the power
requirements of the USB network and may warn the computer's
operator when a given segment requires more power than is available
and may shut down devices in order to keep power consumption
within the available resource.
USB power usage:
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USB pinout and wiring @ pinouts.ru
Bus-powered hubs:
Draw Max 100 mA at power up and 500 mA
normally.
Self-powered hubs:
Draw Max 100 mA, must supply 500 mA to each
port.
Low power, bus-powered functions:
Draw Max 100 mA.
High power, bus-powered functions:
Self-powered hubs: Draw
Max 100 mA, must supply 500 mA to each port.
Self-powered functions:
Draw Max 100 mA.
Suspended device:
Max 0.5 mA
Dedicated charger mode:
A simple USB charger should short the 2 data lines together. The
device will then not attempt to transmit or receive data, but can draw
up to 1.8A, if the supply can provide it.
USB voltage:
Supplied voltage by a host or a powered hub ports is between 4.75 V
and 5.25 V. Maximum voltage drop for bus-powered hubs is 0.35 V
from its host or hub to the hubs output port. All hubs and functions
must be able to send configuration data at 4.4 V, but only low-power
functions need to be working at this voltage. Normal operational
voltage for functions is minimum 4.75 V.
USB cable shielding:
Shield should only be connected to Ground at the host. No device
should connect Shield to Ground.
USB cable wires:
Shielded:
Data: 28
AWG
twisted
Power: 28
AWG
- 20
AWG
non-twisted
Non-shielded:
Data: 28
AWG
non-twisted
Power: 28
AWG
- 20
AWG
non-twisted
Power Gauge Max length
28
0.81 m
26
1.31 m
24
2.08 m
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USB pinout and wiring @ pinouts.ru
22
3.33 m
20
5.00 m
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plug connector and 4 pin USB A / USB B / mini-USB jack connector.
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Is it correct?:
Source(s) of this and additional information:
USB FAQ
,
USB Implementers Forum
USB Specification v1.0 at
USB Implementers Forum
,
wikipedia.org
, "USB in a Nutshell",
Contributor: Chris Angelico (Rosuav), Austin Young, William Andrew, Rob Sudberg, Robert
98 visitors comments
Last updated 2010-10-17 22:40:25.
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