Recent Articles



































Ribbon cable



         


A ribbon 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 like more "traditional" cables. Its name comes from the resemblance of the cable to a piece of ribbon (which is likewise wide and flat). Ribbon cables are common connectors for internal peripherals in computers, such as SCSI and ATA devices.

A two-conductor ribbon cable of 300 ohms characteristic impedance is commonly used as a transmission line for balanced connection of television antennas. This cable is also called twin-lead, see balun.

[Top]

Cable sizes

For computer use, ribbon cables are usually specified by two numbers: the spacing or pitch of the conductors, and the number of conductors or ways. For example, the standard ATA cable used for PC hard disks and CD-ROM drives has 0.1 inch (2.54 mm) pitch and 40 ways, and the high-speed ATA cable has 0.05 inch (1.27 mm) pitch and 80 ways. Finer pitches, as small as 0.3 mm, are found in portable electronic equipment.

[Top]

Cable connectors

Because of the large number of conductors or 'ways' in most ribbon cables, it is not practical to solder them individually to the pins of a connector. Instead, 'insulation displacement connectors' (IDC connectors) are used, 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.) Each contact pierces ('displaces') the insulation of one conductor and grips the copper core. Although it is sometimes possible to dismantle and re-use IDC connectors, they are not designed to allow this.

Popular types of connectors available with IDC termination include:





  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License