Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
An ATX power supply provides a number of peripheral power connectors and (in modern systems) two connectors for the motherboard: an 8-pin (or 4+4-pin) auxiliary connector providing additional power to the CPU and a main 24-pin power supply connector, an extension of the original 20-pin version. 20-pin Molex 39-29-9202 at the motherboard. 20-pin ...
Pinouts of ATX 2.x motherboard power connectors, 24-pin (top) and four-pin "P4" (bottom), as viewed into mating side of the plugs [42] 24-pin ATX motherboard power plug; pins 11, 12, 23 and 24 form a detachable separate four-pin plug, making it backward compatible with 20-pin ATX receptacles
AMP Mate-n-Lok and Molex 8981 0.093-inch pin and socket power connectors Molex standard 0.093-inch pin and socket connectors Molex disk drive power connection system tool and connectors Molex Mini-Fit Jr. connector as used for ATX power supply. A Molex connector is a two-piece pin-and-socket interconnection which became an early electronic ...
#PS_ON pin is marked by number 16. PS-ON Signal is a pin on a 20-pin or 24-pin ATX-specified power connector used to turn a personal computer power supply unit on/off. The PS_ON pin is normally pulled high in an open-circuit, but will turn on the power supply when it is pulled low, by shorting it to the common signal (COM).
ATX12VO power supply connector Color Signal Pin Pin Signal Color Green PS_ON# 1 6 PWR_OK: Gray Black COM 2 7 +12 VSB Purple Black COM 3 8 +12 V1 DC Yellow Black COM 4 9 +12 V1 DC Yellow TBD Reserved 5 10 +12 V1 DC Voltage Sensing Pin Yellow
English: Pinouts of ATX power supply connectors, displayed according to Intel's Power Supply Design Guide for Desktop Platform Form Factors v1.2 (2008) and v1.31 (2013) COM = COMMON VSB = Volts Stand-By
The ATX specification requires that the power-good signal ("PWR_OK") go high no sooner than 100 ms after the power rails have stabilized, and remain high for 16 ms after loss of AC power, and fall (to less than 0.4 V) at least 1 ms before the power rails fall out of specification (to 95% of their nominal value).
In electrical engineering, a common rail (shortened to COM) is a shared path between different electrical routes in an electrical circuit.For example, a device or circuit board might have a power rail or a ground rail, which components are attached to, so all the electrical charge flowing through different components is drawn from/collected into a single conductor line.