Cables Data Sheet
Cables Data Sheet
Cables Data Sheet
What does the information that is listed for each connector mean? See the tutorial.
Nullmodem:
Modem:
Printer:
Parallel:
• LapLink/InterLink Parallel
• ParNet Parallel
• 64NET
• GEOCable
Misc Serial:
Loopback plugs:
Data storage:
• Floppy cable
• IDE cable
• SCSI cable (Amiga/Mac)
• SCSI Cable (D-Sub to Hi D-Sub)
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• ST506/412 cable
• ESDI cable
• Paravision SX1 to IDE
TV/Video/Monitor:
Networking:
Misc:
• ParaLoad cable
• X1541 cable
• MIDI cable
• Misc unsupported cables
Short tutorial
Heading
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 I don't know what
kind of connector it is or how it looks.
There may be some pictures I haven't drawn yet. I illustrate this with the following advanced picture:
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 insde parentheses will tell you at which kind of the device it will look like that.
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Texts describing the connectors
Below the pictures there is texts that describes the connectors. Including the name of the physical connector.
25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Computer 36 PIN CENTRONICS MALE to the Printer.
Pintable The pin table is perhaps the information you are looking for. Should be simple to read. Contains mostly the following three columns; Name, Pin 1,
Pin 2. Sometimes when not the same pin is connected to each side there is another column describing the name at connector 2.
25-DSub 36-Cen
Strobe 1 1
Data Bit 0 2 2
Data Bit 1 3 3
Data Bit 2 4 4
Data Bit 3 5 5
Data Bit 4 6 6
Data Bit 5 7 7
Data Bit 6 8 8
Data Bit 7 9 9
... ... ...
All persons that helped me or sent me information about the connector will be listed here. The source of the information is perhaps a book or another site. I must
admit that I am bad at writing the source, but I will try to fill in these in the future.
Use this cable between two DTE devices (for instance two computers).
D-Sub 1 D-Sub 2
Receive Data 2 3 Transmit Data
Transmit Data 3 2 Receive Data
Data Terminal Ready 4 6+1 Data Set Ready + Carrier Detect
System Ground 5 5 System Ground
Data Set Ready + Carrier Detect 6+1 4 Data Terminal Ready
Request to Send 7 8 Clear to Send
Clear to Send 8 7 Request to Send
Note: DSR & CD are jumpered to fool the programs to think that they are online.
Nullmodem (9-25) Cable Use this cable between two DTE devices (for instance two computers).
D-Sub 9 D-Sub 25
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Receive Data 2 2 Transmit Data
Transmit Data 3 3 Receive Data
Data Terminal Ready 4 6+8 Data Set Ready + Carrier Detect
System Ground 5 7 System Ground
Data Set Ready + Carrier Detect 6+1 20 Data Terminal Ready
Request to Send 7 5 Clear to Send
Clear to Send 8 4 Request to Send
Note: DSR & CD are jumpered to fool the programs to think that they are online.
Use this cable between two DTE devices (for instance two computers).
D-Sub 1 D-Sub 2
Receive Data 3 2 Transmit Data
Transmit Data 2 3 Receive Data
Data Terminal Ready 20 6+8 Data Set Ready + Carrier Detect
System Ground 7 7 System Ground
Data Set Ready + Carrier Detect 6+8 20 Data Terminal Ready
Request to Send 4 5 Clear to Send
Clear to Send 5 4 Request to Send
Note: DSR & CD are jumpered to fool the programs to think that they are online.
The RS-232 standard on the C64 is a little bit strange. It uses inverted TTL level for the signals. The RS-422 ports on the Macintosh has both an inverted and non-
inverted input. By using the inverted instead of non-inverted the inverted C64 level is back to normal.
8 PIN MINI-DIN MALE to the Macintosh. DZM 12 DREH to the C64 UserPort.
Mac C64
GND+RXD- 4+5 1+12+A+N GND
RXD+ 8 M TXD (PA2)
TXD+ 6 B+C RXD (FLAG2+PB0)
D+E RTS+DTR (PB1+PB2)
This cable should be used for DTE to DCE (for instance computer to modem) connections with hardware handshaking.
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(To Computer). (To Modem).
9 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer 25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Modem
This cable should be used for DTE to DCE (for instance computer to modem) connections with hardware handshaking.
25 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer 25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Modem
This cable should be used for DTE to DCE (for instance computer to modem) connections without hardware handshaking.
9 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer 25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Modem
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Receive Data 2 3
System Ground 5 7
Jumper these:
Request to Send 7
Clear to Send 8
Request to Send 4
Clear to Send 5
This cable should be used for DTE to DCE (for instance computer to modem) connections without hardware handshaking.
25 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer . 25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Modem
Jumper these:
Request to Send 4
Clear to Send 5
Request to Send 4
Clear to Send 5
This cable should be used for DTE to DCE (for instance computer to modem) connections with DTR.
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(At the Computer) (To the Modem).
This cable should be used for DTE to DCE (for instance computer to modem) connections without DTR.
RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to the RocketPort card. 25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the modem
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Data Set Ready 7 6
Clear To Send 8 5
This cable should be used to connect an internal 14.4kbps Speedster modem to a computer.
9 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer 15 PIN FEMALE ??? to the modem.
Printer Cable
25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Computer 36 PIN CENTRONICS MALE to the Printer.
25-DSub 36-Cen
Strobe 1 1
Data Bit 0 2 2
Data Bit 1 3 3
Data Bit 2 4 4
Data Bit 3 5 5
Data Bit 4 6 6
Data Bit 5 7 7
Data Bit 6 8 8
Data Bit 7 9 9
Acknowledge 10 10
Busy 11 11
Paper Out 12 12
Select 13 13
Autofeed 14 14
Error 15 32
Reset 16 31
Select 17 36
Signal Ground 18 33
Signal Ground 19 19,20
Signal Ground 20 21,22
Signal Ground 21 23,24
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Signal Ground 22 25,26
Signal Ground 23 27
Signal Ground 24 28,29
Signal Ground 25 30,16
Shield Shield Shield+17
Use this cable between two a computer (DTE) and a printer (DTE) devices.
D-Sub 1 D-Sub 2
Receive Data 3 3 Transmit Data
Transmit Data 2 2 Receive Data
Clear To Send + Data Set Ready 8+6 20 Data Terminal Ready
Carrier Detect + Data Terminal Ready 1 + 4
Ground 5 7 Ground
Use this cable between two a computer (DTE) and a printer (DTE) devices.
D-Sub 1 D-Sub 2
Receive Data 2 3 Transmit Data
Transmit Data 3 2 Receive Data
Clear To Send + Data Set Ready 5+6 20 Data Terminal Ready
Carrier Detect + Data Terminal Ready 8 + 20
Ground 7 7 Ground
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PB4 H 6 Data 4
PB5 J 7 Data 5
PB6 K 8 Data 6
PB7 L 9 Data 7
PA2 M 1 Strobe
GND 3 31 Initialize Printer
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Paper Out 12 12 Paper Out
Signal Ground 17-25 17-25 Signal Ground
64NET Cable
DZM 12 DREH to the C64 User Port. 25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the PC
C64 Dir PC
GND A 25 GND
PB0 C 10 /ACK
PB1 D 11 BUSY
PB2 E 12 PE
PB3 F 5 D3
PB4 H 6 D4
PB5 J 7 D5
PB6 K 8 D6
PB7 L 9 D7
GEOCable Cable
C64 Printer
Ground A 33 Ground
Flag 2 B 11 Busy
PB0 C 2 Data 1
PB1 D 3 Data 2
PB2 E 4 Data 3
PB3 F 5 Data 4
PB4 H 6 Data 5
PB5 J 7 Data 6
PB6 K 8 Data 7
PB7 L 9 Data 8
PA2 M 1 Strobe
Ground N 16 Ground
Use this cable to configure a Cisco router thru the Console port at the router.
9 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to the Cisco router.
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(To Computer). (To the Cisco router)
Use this cable to configure a Cisco router thru the Console port at the router
25 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Computer RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to the Cisco router.
Use this cable to connect a Conrad Electronics Multimeter 3610D to a PC:s serialport.
PC Conrad Dir
Request To Send 7 1
Receive Data 2 2
Transmit Data 3 3
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Data Terminal Ready 4 4
Ground 5 5
Use this cable to connect a Conrad Electronics Multimeter 3610D to a Pac’s serial port.
PC Conrad Dir
Request To Send 4 1
Receive Data 3 2
Transmit Data 2 3
Data Terminal Ready 20 4
Ground 7 5
8 PIN MINI-DIN MALE to the Computer. 4 PIN ??? FEMALE to the HP48
Mac HP48
TxD- 3 RxD
RxD- 5 TxD
GND+RxD+ 4+8 GND
Shield SHIELD SHIELD Shield
Used to verify that a port is working. This one works with Norton Utilities: Norton Diagnostics from Symantec.
(To Computer).
Used to verify that a port is working. This one works with CheckIt.
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(To Computer).
Used to verify that a port is working. This one works with Norton Utilities: Norton Diagnostics from Symantec.
(To Computer).
Used to verify that a port is working. This one works with Norton Utilities: Norton Diagnostics from Symantec.
(To Computer).
Used to verify that a port is working. This one works with CheckIt.
(To Computer).
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CD 1 6 DSR
CD 1 9 RI
RXD 2 3 TXD
DTR 4 6 DSR
RTS 7 8 CTS
Used to verify that a port is working. This one works with CheckIt.
(To Computer).
Floppy Cable
The original floppy cable required that each drive was jumpered to the right ID. But IBM come up with an idea to avoid jumpering the floppies.
If wire 10-16 are twisted before the last connector the jumpering is avoided. Each drive should be jumpered to act as Drive 2. If only one drive is used then leave
the middle connector free.
The IDC could also be an edge connector on some old drives.
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IDE Cable
The IDE interface requires only one cable. All pins straight from 1 to 1, 2 to 2 and so on. The drives can be connected in any order. Only remember that one should
be jumpered as Master and the other as Slave. If only one drive is used, jumper it as Single (if such a mode exists, or most common Master else).
DSub IDC
Request 1 48
Message 2 42
Input/Output 3 50
Reset 4 40
Acknowledge 5 38
Busy 6 36
Data Bus 0 8 2
Data Bus 3 10 8
Data Bus 5 11 12
Data Bus 6 12 14
Data Bus 7 13 16
Control/Data 15 46
Attention 17 32
Select 19 44
Data Parity 20 18
Data Bus 1 21 4
Data Bus 2 22 6
Data Bus 4 23 10
Termination Power 25 26
Note: All the other pins (7+9+14+16+18+24) at the DSub should be connected to the all odd pins except 25 at the IDC connector.
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(To the Amiga/Mac). (To the peripheral).
25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Amiga/Mac. 50 PIN HI-DENSITY D-SUB MALE to the peripheral.
DSub Hi DSub
Request 1 49
Message 2 46
Input/Output 3 50
Reset 4 45
Acknowledge 5 44
Busy 6 43
Data Bus 0 8 26
Data Bus 3 10 29
Data Bus 5 11 31
Data Bus 6 12 32
Data Bus 7 13 33
Control/Data 15 48
Attention 17 41
Select 19 47
Data Parity 20 34
Data Bus 1 21 27
Data Bus 2 22 28
Data Bus 4 23 30
Termination Power 25 38
Note: All the other pins (7+9+14+16+18+24) at the DSub should be connected to pins 1-25 at the Hi-density D-Sub connector.
ST506/412 Cable
The ST506/412 interface requires two cables, one for control and one for data. The control cable is shared between the two drives. But each drive has each own
data cable. By twisting some wires on the control cable it won't be necessary to set the ID for each drive, since the twist will do the job. Wires 25 to 29 should be
twisted between drive 1 & drive 2.
Control cable
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Wire 1-24 1-9 1-9 1-9
Wire 25 25 29 25
Wire 26 26 28 26
Wire 27 27 27 27
Wire 28 28 26 28
Wire 29 29 25 29
Wire 30-34 30-34 30-34 30-34
Data cable
20 PIN IDC FEMALE to the Controller. 20 PIN IDC FEMALE to the Drive.
Controller Drive
Wire 1-20 1-20 1-20
ESDI Cable
The ESDI interface requires two cables, one for control and one for data. The control cable is shared between the two drives. But each drive has each own data
cable. By twisting some wires on the control cable it won't be necessary to set the ID for each drive, since the twist will do the job. Wires 25 to 29 should be
twisted between drive 1 & drive 2.
Control cable
Data cable
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(To the Controller) (To the Drive)
20 PIN IDC FEMALE to the Controller. 20 PIN IDC FEMALE to the Drive.
Controller Drive
Wire 1-20 1-20 1-20
Can be used to connect a normal IDE harddisk to the Paravision SX1. Paravision was earlier known as Microbotics.
37 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the controller. 40 PIN IDC FEMALE to the harddisk.
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Note: Pin 18+19 (+5V) can be used to power the harddisk. But most harddisks require both +5V and +12V.
21 PIN SCART MALE to the TV. 21 PIN SCART MALE to the Video Recorder.
TV VCR
Audio Right Out 1 2 Audio Right In
Audio Right In 2 1 Audio Right Out
Audio Left Out 3 6 Audio Left In
Audio Left In 6 3 Audio Left Out
Audio Ground 4 4 Audio Ground
Red 15 15 Red
Red Ground 13 13 Red Ground
Green 11 11 Green
Green Ground 9 9 Green Ground
Blue 7 7 Blue
Blue Ground 5 5 Blue Ground
Amiga TV
Analog Red 3 15 RGB Red In
Analog Green 4 11 RGB Green In
Analog Blue 5 7 RGB Blue In
Composite Sync 10 20 Video In
Video GND 17 17 Video GND
GND 19 18 Blanking GND
+12V 22 16 Blanking (Connect via a 150 Ohm resistor)
+12V 22 8 Audio/RGB switch (Connect via a 1 kOhm resistor)
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Phono Right GND 4 GND
9 PIN D-SUB MALE to the Computer 15 PIN HIGHDENSITY D-SUB FEMALE to the Monitor
9-Pin 15-Pin
Red Video 1 1
Green Video 2 2
Blue Video 3 3
Horizontal Sync 4 13
Vertical Sync 5 14
Red GND 6 6
Green GND 7 7
Blue GND 8 8
Sync GND 9 10 + 11
23 PIN D-SUB FEMALE to the Amiga. 6 PIN DIN MALE at the Monitor.
Amiga C1084
R 3 4 R
G 4 1 G
B 5 5 B
SYNC 10 2 HSYNC
GND 16 3 GND
8 PIN DIN (DIN45326) MALE at the Computer. 6 PIN DIN MALE at the Monitor.
Computer C1902A
LUM 1 6 LUM
CHROMA 8 4 CHROMA
GND 2 3 GND
AOUT 3 2 AUDIO
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(To the Computer) (To the TV)
8 PIN DIN (DIN45326) MALE at the Computer. 21 PIN SCART MALE to the TV
Computer TV
LUM 1 20 LUM
CHROMA 8 15 CHROMA
GND 2 4+17 GND
AOUT 3 2+6 AUDIO
8 PIN DIN (DIN45326) MALE to the Computer. 21 PIN SCART MALE to the TV
NeoGeo TV
Audio Out 1 6+2 Audio In Left+Right
Ground 2 18 Blanking Signal Ground
Composite Video Out 3 20 Composite Video In
? 4 16 Blanking Signal
Green 5 11 RGB Green In
Red 6 15 RGB Red In
Blue 8 7 RGB Blue In
This cable can be used to cascade hubs, or for connecting two Ethernet stations back-to-back without a hub. It works with both 10Base-T and 100Base-TX.
(To network interface card 1). (To network interface card 2).
RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to network interface card 1. RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to network interface card 2.
This cable will work with both 10Base-T and 100Base-TX and is used to connect a network interface card to a hub or network outlet. These cables are sometimes
called "whips".
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(To network interface card). (To hub).
RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to network interface card). RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to hub).
Just for your information, this is how the pairs are named:
The + side of each pair is called the "tip" and the - side is called the "ring", a reference to old telephone connectors.
This cable can be used to cascade hubs, or for connecting two Ethernet stations back-to-back without a hub.
(To network interface card 1). (To network interface card 1).
RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to network interface card 1. RJ45 MALE CONNECTOR to network interface card 2.
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ParaLoad Cable
DZM 12 DREH at the C64 User Port. 25 PIN D-SUB MALE at the Amiga
C64 Amiga
Ground A 17-25 Ground
FLAG2 B 1 Strobe
PB0 C 2 D0
PB1 D 3 D1
PB2 E 4 D2
PB3 F 5 D3
PB4 H 6 D4
PB5 J 7 D5
PB6 K 8 D6
PB7 L 9 D7
PA2 M 11 Busy
X1541 Cable
Used to transfer data from a Commodore 1541/1581 disk drive to a PC. The X1541 software is written by Leopold Ghielmetti.
25 PIN D-SUB MALE to the PC. 6 PIN DIN (DIN45322) MALE to the Cable
PC Disk drive
GND 18-25 2 GND
STROBE 1 3 ATN
AUTOFEED 14 4 CLOCK
SELECTIN 17 5 DATA
INIT 16 6 RESET
MIDI Cable
5 PIN DIN 180° (DIN41524) MALE to the 1st peripheral. 5 PIN DIN 180° (DIN41524) MALE to the 1st peripheral.
1st 2nd
Shield 2 2
Current Source 4 4
Current Sink 5 5
Note: Although that pin 2 only is connected at MIDI Out it's simpler to connect it to both ends.
These cables may or may not be correctly constructed. Handle with care.
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Amiga to IBM RGBI Cable
C128 C1702
Ground 1 1 Ground
Monochrome out 7 2 Signal
WITH THANKS FROM WINSTAR GUJRAT PAKISTAN
EMAIL: -
LWINERL@HOTMAIL.COM WINSTARPK@XMAIL.COM
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