Short tutorial
Heading
First at each page there a short heading describing what the connector is.
Pictures of the connectors
After that there is at each page there is one or more pictures of the connectors. Sometimes there is some question marks only. This means that we don't know what kind of connector it is or how it looks.
(at the
computer)
There may be some pictures we haven't drawn yet. We illustrate this with the following advanced picture:
(at the
computer)
Normally are one or more pictures. These are seen from the front, and NOT the soldside. Holes (female connectors usually) are darkened. Look at the example below. The first is a female connector and the send a male. The texts inside parentheses will tell you at which kind of the device it will look like that.
(at
the videocard)
(at the
monitor cable)
Texts describing the connectors
Below the pictures there is texts that describes the connectors. Including the name of the physical connector.
5 PIN DIN 180� (DIN41524) at the computer.
Pin table
The pin table is perhaps the information you are looking for. Should be simple to read. Contains mostly the following three columns; Pin, Name & Description.
Pin | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | CLOCK | Key Clock |
2 | GND | GND |
3 | DATA | Key Data |
4 | VCC | +5 VDC |
5 | n/c | Not connected |
Contributor & Source
All persons that helped us or sent us information about the connector will be listed here. The source of the information is perhaps a book or another site.
Contributor: Joakim �gren
Source: Amiga 4000 User's Guide from Commodore
Copyright © The Hardware Book Team 1996-2004.
May be copied and redistributed, partially or in whole, as appropriate.
Document last modified: 2002-01-13