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CP2102 USB To Serial USB To UART TTL 2.0 Module


About this item 

  1. CP2102 USB 2.0 to TTL Module Serial Converter
  2. Adapter Module USB to TTL Downloader With Jumper Wires.
  3. Stable and reliable chipset CP2102
  4. USB specification 2.0 compliant with full-speed 12Mbps.
  5. Supports Windows 98SE, 2003, XP, Vista, Window7, Mac OSX , Linux 2.6.x and 2.4.3

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USB to Serial Converter CP2102 Description:

CP2102 USB 2.0 to TTL Module Serial Converter With cableDescription:
1. This is a USB 2.0 to TTL UART 6PIN CP2102 Module Serial Converter. Connect MCU easily to your computer!
2. Stable and reliable chipset CP2102
3. USB specification 2.0 compliant with full-speed 12Mbps.
4. Standard USB type A male and TTL 6pin connector. 6pins for 3.3V, RST, TXD, RXD, GND & 5V.
5. All handshaking and modem interface signals.
6. Baud rates: 300 bps to 1.5 MBPS.
7. Byte receive buffer; 640 byte transmit buffer.
8. Hardware or X-On/X-Off handshaking supported.
9. Event character support Line break transmission.
10. USB suspend states supported via SUSPEND pins.
11. Temperature Range: -40 to +85.
12. Supports Windows 98SE, 2000, XP, Vista, Window7, Mac OS 9, Mac OS X & Linux 2.40.

USB to Serial Converter CP2102 About TTL Converter

USB serial adapters can be isolated or non-isolated. The isolated version has opto-couplers and/or surge suppressors to prevent static electricity or other high-voltage surges to enter the data lines thereby preventing data loss and damage to the adapter and connected serial device. The non-isolated version has no protection against static electricity or voltage surges, which is why this version is usually recommended for only non-critical applications and at short communication ranges.

Historically, most personal computers had a built-in D-sub serial RS232 port, also referred to as a COM port, which could be used for connecting the computer to most types of serial RS232 devices. By the late ’90s, many computer manufacturers started to phase out the serial COM port in favor of the USB port. By the mid-2000s, some computers had both a serial COM port and a USB port; however, many no longer had a serial COM port by that time, and today most modern computers have no serial COM port but instead only USB ports.

Since many serial devices with a RS-232, RS-485 or RS-422 port are still in use and even still produced today, the disappearance of the serial COM port from personal computers has created a need for the USB to serial adapter.

en.wikipedia.org

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