Little Bird
Panel Mount USB Cable - USB A Plug to USB A Right Angle Socket
$90.00
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Out of stock
This handy USB extension cable will make it easy to enclose a device with an A-type (USB host) port. We think this would be most handy when putting a Beagle ...
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This handy USB extension cable will make it easy to enclose a device with an A-type (USB host) port. We think this would be most handy when putting a Beagle Bone, Raspberry Pi, or Mintyboost into a box.
The jack half has two mounting 'ears' with 8mm M3 screws installed, 30mm apart. The ears are flexible, so the holes don't have to be drilled very precisely. Can be used with box walls up to 0.25" wide. The screws can be put on from the back for 'reverse' mounting if the box thickness is a problem. Entire unit is 13.2" long from tip to tip (with 9.4" cabling between USB connectors).
Technical Details
The jack half has two mounting 'ears' with 8mm M3 screws installed, 30mm apart. The ears are flexible, so the holes don't have to be drilled very precisely. Can be used with box walls up to 0.25" wide. The screws can be put on from the back for 'reverse' mounting if the box thickness is a problem. Entire unit is 13.2" long from tip to tip (with 9.4" cabling between USB connectors).
Technical Details
- Panel mount USB type A socket with USB type A plug at cable end
- 28 AWG data, 24 AWG power wires
- Shielded with wire braid
Dimensions:
- 13.2" / 335mm long from tip to tip
- 9.4" / 240mm cable length between connectors
- 2 x 8mm M3 mounting screws, ~30mm apart
- Weight: 26.3g
- Datasheet
- Dimensional Drawing
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.
- USB host
- A USB host is the side of a USB connection that controls attached devices, like a computer talking to a keyboard or flash drive. This matters because most microcontroller boards are normally USB devices, so adding USB host support lets them use common USB peripherals.
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au