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#1
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Does anyone know if a 9 pin female on both ends have the same pin outs.
1 to 1 and 2 to 2 and so on? I am trying to run some software and it says it can't read the freq. Does standard RS-232 cable have the same pin outs on both ends? Thanks Steve |
#3
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On Sun, 09 Jan 2005 17:16:34 GMT, Panzer240
wrote: There are two type ![]() The other is called a null modem cable and has crossovers i.e. pin 2 -- pin 3 an vice versa. Shouldn't that be pin 1 - 9, pin 2 to pin 8, etc? -- To reply, remove TheObvious from my e-mail address. |
#4
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I think when they say standard RS-232 is means Data 1 to 1 and so on.
If you cross them, is it then a Null modem cable. Steve "Evan Platt" wrote in message ... On Sun, 09 Jan 2005 17:16:34 GMT, Panzer240 wrote: There are two type ![]() The other is called a null modem cable and has crossovers i.e. pin 2 -- pin 3 an vice versa. Shouldn't that be pin 1 - 9, pin 2 to pin 8, etc? -- To reply, remove TheObvious from my e-mail address. |
#5
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Evan Platt wrote in
: On Sun, 09 Jan 2005 17:16:34 GMT, Panzer240 wrote: There are two type ![]() The other is called a null modem cable and has crossovers i.e. pin 2 -- pin 3 an vice versa. Shouldn't that be pin 1 - 9, pin 2 to pin 8, etc? Nope, did you try following the link ???? All the info you need but afraid to ask for is there, it just takes a bit of reading. *8^) -- Panzer |
#6
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"Steve" wrote in
: I think when they say standard RS-232 is means Data 1 to 1 and so on. If you cross them, is it then a Null modem cable. That is correct provided the correct pins a crossed. Standard is straight through, the pins correspond. There should also be a male and a female connector. Each lead in the interface is assigned a purpose e.g. DTE pin 2 is TX Data DCE pin 2 is RX Data. Since the type of interface (DTE or DCE) has different functions assigned to each pin, a standard cable allows for example the DTE to TX on pin 2 and a DCE to RX on the same pin 2. Therefore you do not require a crossover in the wiring. However when you are interfacing a DTE to a DTE you now have a problem. Firstly the connectors will not match a standard cable, which has a male on the DCE end and a female on the DTE end. Two DTEs would both have male connectors so the cable should have two female connectors. Also since they are both DTE the both would try to send data on pin 2 and they would never RX any data from each other. That is why you have to crossover pin 2 on one end to pin 3 and vice versa on the other and so that the DTEs can talk to each other. The same applies to a pair of DCE's but the connectors on the cable should both be male. If the equipment has a 9 pin on one end and a 25 in on the other it may under some circumstances require circuit modifications to get them to work if some of the flow control leads are required for the interface to work. This is because the are 16 more leads on one end. That is when you get in "custom" cables. Fortunately most PC applications usually only require pins 2,3 and 7 to work. IF you cannot get it work using thise 3 leads, then you will require a more than basic understanding of the inteface parameters or the devices you are trying to interface. The above is all predicated on the equipment you are using correctly adheres to the RS-232 standard, something that is not always the case. ![]() -- Panzer |
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