CONNECTOR GLOSSARY
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This Reference attempts to use the correct, or at least consistent,
designations for all connectors. Some of these designations are not in
common use, so this glossary lists and describes all connector names
used.
BNC Two-conductor (center and shield) coaxial connector with
twist lock. Typically used for thin Ethernet.
CARD-EDGE Not an official designation. A connector, usually
without a shell, consisting of an extended piece of
printed-circuit board with conductors on one or both
sides, or a matching female connector, with a slot into
which the circuit board extension is pushed. Common
examples are the ISA, EISA, MicroChannel, PCI, and
Multibus buses.
DE Small D-subminiature shell, commonly used for nine-pin
serial ports and video connectors, and fifteen-pin VGA
video connectors.
DE9 DE shell with nine pins in two rows, commonly called
DB9. Typically used for serial ports and monochrome
video connectors.
DA Somewhat wider D-subminiature shell, commonly used for
AUI Ethernet connectors (sometimes incorrectly called
"thicknet") and game ports on IBM-type PCs.
DA15 DA shell with fifteen pins in two rows, commonly called
DB15. Typically used for AUI Ethernet and type-3
keyboard/mouse connectors.
DB The most common size of D-subminiature shell, commonly
used for 25-pin serial ports, SCSI ports on Macintoshes,
and parallel ports on IBM-type PCs.
DB25 DB shell with 25 pins in two rows. Typically used for
serial ports.
DD Large D-subminiature shell, not in common use outside of
older Sun equipment.
DD50 DD shell with 50 pins in three rows, commonly called
DB50 or D50. Typically used for SCSI ports on older
equipment.
DIN-8 Not an official designation. Round DIN shell with eight
pins.
HD50 Not an official designation. D-subminiature-like shell
with fifty closely-spaced pins in two rows, typically
used for SCSI ports on newer equipment.
HEADER Not an official designation. A connector, possibly
without a shell, consisting of pins on 1/8" (???)
centers, reminiscent of a jumper block, or a matching
female connector. May have any number of pins or rows.
Typically used only internally. Common examples are VME
and the connectors on raw SCSI and IDE disk drives.