Adafruit
Panel Mount USB Cable - USB A Plug to USB A Right Angle Socket
· MPN: ADA6004
$7.81
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In stock at supplier
This panel-mount USB extension cable runs a USB Type-A port through an enclosure wall. The socket end has two flexible mounting ears with pre-installed M3 sc...
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This panel-mount USB extension cable runs a USB Type-A port through an enclosure wall. The socket end has two flexible mounting ears with pre-installed M3 screws for securing to a panel, while the plug end connects to a USB host device inside the enclosure — ideal for Raspberry Pi, BeagleBone, or any project box that needs an accessible USB port.
Key Features
- Panel-Mount Socket – USB Type-A socket with flexible mounting ears and M3 hardware
- Right-Angle Socket – Low-profile exit for tight enclosures
- Shielded Cable – Wire braid shielding with 28 AWG data and 24 AWG power lines
- Flexible Ears – Mounting holes don't require precise drilling; fits walls up to 6 mm (0.25″) thick
Specifications
- Connectors – USB Type-A plug to USB Type-A right-angle panel-mount socket
- Total Length – 335 mm (13.2″) tip to tip
- Cable Length – 240 mm (9.4″) between connectors
- Mounting – 2× M3 screws, 30 mm apart
- Wire Gauge – 28 AWG data, 24 AWG power
- Shielding – Wire braid
- Weight – 26.3 g
Ideal For
- Raspberry Pi and BeagleBone enclosures
- Custom project boxes needing external USB access
- Kiosk and panel-mounted equipment
Resources
Package Contents
- 1× Panel-mount USB cable (USB-A plug to USB-A right-angle socket, with M3 mounting hardware)
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.