Adafruit
2.0mm Pitch 4-pin Cable Matching Pair - JST PH Compatible
A matching pair of 4-pin JST PH compatible cables with inline plug and socket connectors. Each cable is 20 cm long with stranded 26 AWG wires, providing a re...
A matching pair of 4-pin JST PH compatible cables with inline plug and socket connectors. Each cable is 20 cm long with stranded 26 AWG wires, providing a reliable and compact connection that can carry a couple of amps of current.
The friction-lock connectors make it easy to connect and disconnect, and are compatible with any JST PH 2.0 mm pitch connectors.
Specifications
- Connector Type: JST PH compatible (2.0 mm pitch)
- Pins: 4
- Cable Length: 20 cm each
- Wire Gauge: 26 AWG (stranded)
- Locking: Friction lock
Ideal For
- I2C and sensor connections
- Quick-connect wiring for prototypes
- Projects requiring easy disconnect capability
- Motor and servo connections
Package Contents
- 1× 4-pin inline plug cable (20 cm)
- 1× 4-pin inline socket cable (20 cm)
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- AWG
- American Wire Gauge is a numbering system for wire thickness, where a lower number means a thicker wire. The AWG rating matters because thicker wire can usually carry more current with less voltage drop and heating.
- I2C
- I2C is a two-wire communication bus used by many sensors and small modules. It matters because several I2C devices can share the same two wires, but each device needs a compatible address and your controller must support I2C.
- JST PH
- A small keyed plug-and-socket connector with 2 mm pin spacing, often used for low-power electronics connections. You need the correct JST PH cable, and its current rating limits how much power should be passed through it.
- pH
- A measure of how acidic or alkaline a liquid is, on a scale where 7 is neutral. For a water monitoring kit, pH tells you about water chemistry and whether the included probe matches the range and accuracy your project needs.
- servo
- A servo is a motor with built-in position control, usually told to move to a specific angle by a control signal. It matters when you need repeatable movement, such as steering, arms, flaps, or linkages, rather than continuous spinning.
Find this product in
Prototyping & Wiring
Related Tutorials
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