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PATA 40-pin

Parallel SCSI

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Referred to alternately as SCSI (Small Computers Systems Interface) Parallel Interface, SPI, or, before the advent of Serial SCSI, simply SCSI (pronounced "scuzzy"). Unfortunately, Parallel SCSI is not technically a single standard, but a series of almost a dozen related interfaces with ambiguous names ("Fast SCSI", "Ultra SCSI," etc.) and variable bit depths and rates. See the link to a comparison table below. In any case, Parallel SCSI cables were used to connect peripheral devices to computers; unlike PATA, which could only connect a maximum of two devices, a single Parallel SCSI data bus could be attached to up to 8 or 16 devices. The symbol below generally marked a SCSI port on computers.

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Referred to alternately as SCSI (Small Computers Systems Interface) Parallel Interface, SPI, or, before the advent of Serial SCSI, simply SCSI (pronounced "scuzzy"). Unfortunately, Parallel SCSI is not technically a single standard, but a series of almost a dozen related interfaces with ambiguous names ("Fast SCSI", "Ultra SCSI," etc.) and variable bit depths and rates. See the link to a comparison table below. In any case, Parallel SCSI cables were used to connect peripheral devices (scanners, removable storage drives and controllers, optical disc drives, etc.) to computers; unlike PATA, which could only connect a maximum of two devices, a single Parallel SCSI data bus could be attached to up to 8 or 16 devices. The symbol below generally marked a SCSI port on computers.

Introduced: 1986

Max bit depth and rate: See comparison table

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Parallel SCSI 50-pin Micro-Ribbon

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Micro ribbon or miniature ribbon connectors have a similar shielded design to the D-sub family of connectors, but used a different kind of contact known as ribbon contacts rather than pin contacts. There are various configurations that were used with Parallel SCSI but the most common variety was a 50-contact micro-ribbon connector. These connectors were often referred to by the brand name of the company that manufactured them: for instance, Amphenol-50, IDC-50, CN-50 (Centronics).

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Micro ribbon or miniature ribbon connectors have a similar shielded design to the D-sub family of connectors, but used a different kind of contact known as ribbon contacts rather than pin contacts. There are various configurations that were used with Parallel SCSI but the most common variety was an 8-bit (one-byte-at-a-time) 50-contact micro-ribbon connector. These connectors were often referred to by the brand name of the company that manufactured them: for instance, Amphenol-50, IDC-50, CN-50 (Centronics).

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