PM-121 - Out Of Production
2 Port RS422/485 PCMCIA with detachable cables and 1 Mega-baud data rate
Description
PC Card providing two RS422/485 serial ports. Data transfer rates up to 921,600 baud rates and the 128 byte deep transmit and 128 byte receive FIFOS, coupled with 1Mbit/s line drivers deliver uncompromising performance on your laptop. Drivers for Windows 32 bit and 64 bit Operating Systems including Windows 95/98/2000, XP, Server 2003, Vista, Server 2008 and Windows 7.
Brief Specification
Ports
2
Protocol
RS422/485
UART
Brainboxes 16PCI950+
Max Baud Rate
921,600
Ruggedised
No
- Tech Spec
- Operating Systems
- Approvals
- Support
- Related Products
Port
Ports
2
Protocol
RS422/485
Connector
DB9 Connector - 9 Pin Male
UART
Brainboxes 16PCI950+
UART Compatibility
16750/16550/16450 backwards compatible as well as an enhanced 950 mode
Tx FIFO Size
128
Rx FIFO Size
128
Cable
2 Port Cable: DB9 connector (9 Pin Male)
Port Settings
Max Baud Rate
921,600
Data Bits
5,6,7 or 8
Parity
Odd, Even, None, Mark or Space
Stop Bits
1, 1.5 or 2
Flow Control
RTS/CTS, DTR/DSR
Tx/Rx Modes
Full Duplex, Half Duplex Autogating
General
Ruggedised
No
PCB Layers
4
Power Consumption
100mA @ 5V
Product Weight
0.029 kg, 0.06 pounds
Product Dimensions
85(l) x 54(w) x 5(h) mm, 3.35(l) x 2.13(w) x 0.20(h) inches
Packaged Weight
0.167 kg, 0.37 pounds
Packaged Dimensions
awaiting
GTIN-12
837324000115
Interface

PCMCIA
PCMCIA (Personal Computer Memory Card International Association) is an international standards body and trade association with over 100 member companies that was founded in 1989 to establish standards for Integrated Circuit cards and to promote interchangeability among mobile computers where ruggedness, low power, and small size were critical. Change
PCMCIA (Personal Computer Memory Card International Association) is an international standards body and trade association with over 100 member companies that was founded in 1989 to establish standards for Integrated Circuit cards and to promote interchangeability among mobile computers where ruggedness, low power, and small size were critical. Change

























