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RS-485, also known as TIA-485(-A) or EIA-485, is a standard, originally introduced in 1983, defining the electrical characteristics of drivers and receivers for use in serial communications systems. Electrical signaling is balanced , and multipoint systems are supported.
An 8 pin circular connector is used to connect (or daisy chain) AISG devices. AISG consortium has released C485 standard for this RS-485 connector. This standard specifies the mechanical dimensions of the connector more tightly than the previously used standard (IEC 60130-9 - Ed. 3.0 standard with screw-ring locking ring).
The electric signaling levels are handled by a driver circuit external to the UART. Common signal levels are RS-232, RS-485, and raw TTL [1] for short debugging links. Early teletypewriters used current loops. It was one of the earliest computer communication devices, used to attach teletypewriters for an operator console.
The MPI is based on the standard EIA-485 (formerly RS-485) and works with a speed from 187.5 kBd to 12 MBd. The network MPI must have resistance at the end of the line and it is generally included in the connector and activated by a simple switch.
USB-to-serial RS-232 adapters are often used with consumer, commercial and industrial applications and USB-to-serial RS-485/422 adapters are usually mainly used only with industrial applications. Currently, USB to TTL-level UART converters are used extensively by students and hobbyist as they can be directly interfaced to microcontrollers.
UEXT pinout for IDC connector (looking into connector on host board) The UEXT connector presents power and three serial buses: Asynchronous, I 2 C, SPI. [1] All pins conform to 3.3 volt digital logic. The asynchronous serial bus requires additional level-shifting circuits and connectors to support RS-232, RS-422, RS-485, DMX512, or MIDI.