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I/O port plug.
Posted: Thu Apr 19, 2007 5:42 pm
by Devlin
Hi,
Anybody know where I can buy A plug that will connect to the I/O port?
I want a plug that can be connected to a circuit board. like the plug on a modem.
Or does anyone know the correct name of this part?
Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2007 3:42 am
by carlsson
Are you referring to the user port? It is a double sided connector with a total of 24 pins, pitch 0.156" (3.96 mm).
Digi-Key part number EDC307240-ND. It costs $3.47 a piece if you order just one.
For that matter, the tape connector (and IEEE as found on PETs) also have the same spacing. If I understand correctly, the cartridge port also uses 0.156" pitch but of course the reverse combination of genders.
http://members.tripod.com/~petlibrary/PLUGS.HTM
Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2007 11:04 am
by Jogi
Hi,
1.
http://www.allelectronics.com
2. search "CAT# cc-500"
Regards Jogi
Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2007 1:18 pm
by carlsson
What is that cable used for, i.e. which signals go in the 5-pin DIN? On the other site, I read about some special cable that has a 6-pin DIN in one end and a card edge connector in the other. It was meant to connect a VIC/64 to a PET, and use the PET as an IEEE slave device.
Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2007 4:21 pm
by jbuonacc
thank you!!!
EDIT: just ordered a handful of them, i'll update when they arrive. probably should've inquired about what pins are connected internally, but i figured even the parts alone are worth more to me than $1.50 each.
Yes it was...
Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2007 11:28 pm
by Devlin
Yes it was the plug for the I/O user port.
So you are correct 24 pins.
Now I see the part on digi tech. Looks good,but was that just the plug?
If so the I now know how to get a hold of it. With this I assume it can be glued or somehow connected to a breadboard that is cut and adujsted to fit in to port.
Okay the other one at allelectronics. Looks like a good price but I noticed it connects to another cable? Can I cut off the cable and then open the plug to hook up a diffrent config or should I just go with the digi tech plug?
So here is questions.
By the way I did buy a old modem a long time ago and I stripped the parts but it got really weird. Thats why I just want the plug so I can start fresh and make an original piece of hardware. With all new parts.
Is the plug on digi tech just the plug with 24 leads that can be hooked up to a custom breadboard?
Basic questions for basic answers.
Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 12:35 am
by jbuonacc
glued?

maybe that's why your other one 'got really weird'? lofl...
i'm thinking that the DigiKey and the other are the same connector (with the solder/wire eyelets) which would be soldered to either side of the board. i've seen the other pin style connectors as well, but i can't recall where. i think these would be what you'd want to connect to a 'breadboard'.
the cables from All Electronics look to be an amzing deal compared to DigiKey! the connector, a housing, and DIN cable all for less than half the price of one lone connector from DigiKey. wow! there can only be a few wires connected internally, so seperating the cable from the connector (or rewiring it) should be no problem.
what are you trying to make?
Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 4:00 am
by carlsson
Hopefully the connector from All Electronics is fully wired, so not only the pins used by the cable are connected.
Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 9:10 am
by jbuonacc
that's a thought...

hadn't figured on that. we'll see...
you mean like there might only be three or five 'teeth' in the connector?

Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2007 3:57 am
by carlsson
Yep. One never knows, when it is so inexpensive. Hopefully it once cost more to custom make connectors than to fully populate them.
Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2007 11:52 pm
by jbuonacc
i was thinking more about this. wouldn't it be pretty unlikely to have only a few pins in the connector itself? have you seen them like this before? i would think that the pins are what makes the connection snug and that it'd be loose or uneven with just a few in there. i guess i'll find out soon enough, i'll surely report back when they arrive.
also, which few contacts on the port might they connect to? what application might the cables have been manufactured for?
Posted: Fri Apr 27, 2007 2:05 am
by carlsson
If the cable even is for PET/VIC/64. I suppose this connector had many uses, and All Electronics may just assume that the cables relate to C64 without knowing the exact use. As I wrote above, if it had a 6-pin DIN instead of a 5-pin, it might be for connecting a PET as an IEEE slave interface.
Posted: Tue May 01, 2007 1:50 am
by jbuonacc
Posted: Tue May 01, 2007 8:47 am
by carlsson
Are only three wires connected, and which ones? Based on your picture, it looks like ground, reset and CB2 (or whatever that signal is called on the C64). Or maybe that is ground, JOY0 and CB2. Of course it could be turned upside-down and the signals are ground, PB6/7 and +5V. In that case, maybe some application that had one data line and required external power. Just speculating.
Switching Station
Posted: Tue May 01, 2007 9:41 pm
by Devlin
The one from all electronics looks just like what I need.
I made a switching station that works off of PB0-PB7.
And need a cable to hook it up.
I like the fact that it can be unscrewed to attach any wires need be.
So I have 8 3V Relays on my switching kit buffered and all!