Cables and Connectors
Cables and Connectors
The other end of the USB cable may have different connectors including USB-B (a
square connector commonly used with printers, external hard drives, and larger
devices) or smaller connectors such as the Mini-USB and Micro-USB that are commonly used
with portable devices such as media players and phones.
<img
title="USB cable converters" src="http://img.labnol.org/di/USB_cables.png" alt="USB cable
converters" width="536" height="263" border="0"/>
Additionally, many other connectors have USB-A connectors at the end that connects to the
computer, and a device-specific connector at the other end (e.g. the iPod or a Zune). Then you
have USB Male to Female connectors for extending the length of a USB cable.
Many other non-USB cables can also connect to your computer via a USB converter; these
cables have the standard USB-A connector on one end while the other end could have
connections for other ports such as Ethernet or audio.
2. Audio Cables and Connectors
2.1 – 3.5mm headphone jack
Most speakers and microphones can connect to the computer with these audio cables. The
microphone port on your computer is usually pink while the speaker port, where you insert the
stereo audio cable, is colored green. Some computers have additional TSR audio ports colored
black, grey, and gold; these are for rear, front, and center/subwoofer output,
respectively.
For high-end audio, like when you want to connect the output of a DVD player or a set-top box
to a Dolby home theater, you need the TOSLINK (or S/PDIF) connector.
<img
style="display: inline; border-width: 0px;" title="toslink optical cable"
src="http://img.labnol.org/di/toslink_cable.png" alt="toslink optical cable" width="536"
height="247" border="0"/>
These are fiber optic cables and can therefore transmit pure digital audio through light. Some
laptops and audio equipment have a mini-TOSLINK jack but you can use a converter to connect
it to a standard TOSLINK (Toshiba Link) port.
3. Video Cables
3.1 – VGA
One of the most common video connectors for computer monitors and high-definition TVs is the
VGA cable. A standard VGA connector has 15-pins and other than connecting a computer to a
monitor, you may also use a VGA cable to connect your laptop to a TV screen or a projector.
<img
style="display: inline; border-width: 0px;" title="VGA cables and converters"
src="http://img.labnol.org/di/VGA.jpg" alt="VGA cables and converters" width="536"
height="189" border="0"/>
Converter cables are lso available to let VGA monitors connect to newer computers that only
output HDMI or DVI signals. A smaller variant of VGA, Mini-VGA, is available on some
laptops but with the help of a converter, you can connect any standard VGA monitor to a Mini-
VGA port of your laptop.
A DVI cable has 29 pins, though some connectors may have less pins depending on their
configuration. DVI’s video signal is compatible with HDMI, so a simple converter can allow a
DVI monitor to receive input from an HDMI cable.
Additionally, DVI to VGA converters are also available for connect your new graphics card to
old monitor that supports only VGA mode.
3.3 – S-Video
S-Video cables, otherwise known as Separate Video or Super Video cables, carry analog video
signals and are commonly used for connecting DVD players, camcorders, older video consoles
to the television.
Standard S-Video connectors are round in shape and may have anywhere between 4-9 pins.
RCA connector cables are a bundle of 2-3 cables including Composite Video (colored yellow)
and Stereo Audio cables (red for right channel and white or black for the left audio channel).
<img
style="display: inline; border-width: 0px;" title="RCA cables and connectors"
src="http://img.labnol.org/di/RCA_cables.jpg" alt="RCA cables and connectors" width="536"
height="231" border="0"/>
Sometimes additional cables may be included, offering additional audio channels and/or
component video instead of composite. Component video offers better picture than composite
because the video signal is split in different signals while in the case of composite, everything is
transferred through a single yellow plug.
Uses of RCA Connectors – The RCA cables are usually used for connecting your DVD player,
stereo speakers, digital camera and other audio/video equipment to your TV. You can plug-in an
RCA cable to the computer via a video capture card and this will let you transfer video from an
old analog camcorder into your computer’s hard drive.
Standard HDMI cables can be up to 5 meters long, but higher quality ones can be up to 15 meters
long, and the length can be further increased with amplifiers. HDMI is backwards compatible
with DVI so you can use a converter to watch video on a DVI device through the HDMI cable
though you will have to use another cable for the audio.
4.3 – DisplayPort
Mini DisplayPort connector is currently used in MacBooks but we could them in other
computers as well in the near future.
Standard DisplayPort cables can be up to 3 meters long, but at a lower resolution cables can be
up to 15 meters long. DisplayPort connectors are available to connect VGA, DVI video, or
HDMI video and audio with a DisplayPort cable or connection. Additionally, converters are
available to convert Mini DisplayPort into standard DisplayPort.
5. Data Cables
<img style="display: inline; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px;
border-width: 0px;" title="firewire ieee 1394"
src="http://img.labnol.org/di/firewire.jpg" alt="firewire ieee
1394" width="119" height="96" align="right" border="0"/> 5.1 – Firewire
IEEE 1394
Firewire, otherwise known as IEEE 1394, i.LINK, or Lynx, is a faster alternate to USB and is
commonly used for connecting digital camcorders and external hard drives to a computer. It is
also possible to ad-hoc network computers without a router over FireWire.
Firewire typically has 6 pins in its connector, though a 4 pin variety is common as well.
However, the eSATA cable cannot transmit power, so unlike USB, you cannot power an external
hard drive with eSATA. The eSATA cable is somewhat different from the internal SATA cable;
it has more shielding, and sports a larger connector.
The telephone cable, otherwise known as RJ11, is still used around the world for connecting to
the Internet through DSL/ADSL modems. A standard phone cable has 4 wires and the connector
has four pins.
The connector has a clip at the top to help maintain a tight connection.
The Ethernet connector, likewise, has 8 pins and looks similar to a phone plug, but is actually
thicker and wider. It too has a clip to help maintain a tight connection like a phone connector.