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  2. CAN bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAN_bus

    High-speed CAN uses a 120 Ω resistor at each end of a linear bus. Low-speed CAN uses resistors at each node. Other types of terminations may be used such as the Terminating Bias Circuit defined in ISO11783. [9] A terminating bias circuit provides power and ground in addition to the CAN signaling on a four-wire cable.

  3. Electrical termination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_termination

    For many systems, the terminator is a resistor, with a value chosen to match the characteristic impedance of the transmission line and chosen to have acceptably low parasitic inductance and capacitance at the frequencies relevant to the system. Examples include 75-ohm resistors often used to terminate 75-ohm video transmission coaxial cables.

  4. Zero-ohm link - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-ohm_link

    A zero-ohm link or zero-ohm resistor is a wire link packaged in the same physical package format as a resistor. It is used to connect traces on a printed circuit board (PCB). This format allows it to be placed on the circuit board using the same automated equipment used to place other resistors, instead of requiring a separate machine to ...

  5. Foundation Fieldbus H1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundation_Fieldbus_H1

    Every field bus segment needs exactly two terminators to operate properly. The terminators are designed to be the equivalent of a 1 μF capacitor and a 100 Ω resistor in series. The terminators serve several purposes including shunting the Fieldbus current (device communication) and protecting against electrical reflections.

  6. Low-voltage differential signaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-voltage_differential...

    The current passes through a termination resistor of about 100 to 120 ohms (matched to the cable's characteristic impedance to reduce reflections) at the receiving end, and then returns in the opposite direction via the other wire. From Ohm's law, the voltage difference across the resistor is therefore about 350 mV. The receiver senses the ...

  7. CAN FD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAN_FD

    CAN FD is typically used in high performance ECUs of modern vehicles. A modern vehicle can have more than 70 ECUs that use CAN FD to exchange information over the CAN bus when the engine is running or when the vehicle is moving. On a CAN bus, a frame is the basic unit of messaging. For a classic CAN bus, a frame consists of an 11-bit identifier ...

  8. Floppy disk drive interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floppy_disk_drive_interface

    As a result, all drives could have their jumpers set to be drive "B", but if they were connected after the twist, they would appear to the controller as drive "A". This eliminated the need to change selection jumpers in the drive, and eventually many floppy drives were manufactured without jumpers at all, instead being hardwired as drive "B".

  9. Jump wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jump_wire

    Stranded 22AWG jump wires with solid tips. A jump wire (also known as jumper, jumper wire, DuPont wire) is an electrical wire, or group of them in a cable, with a connector or pin at each end (or sometimes without them – simply "tinned"), which is normally used to interconnect the components of a breadboard or other prototype or test circuit, internally or with other equipment or components ...