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  2. Printed circuit board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Printed_circuit_board

    A breakout board can allow interconnection between two incompatible connectors. This breakout board allows an SD card's pins to be accessed easily while still allowing the card to be hot-swapped. A minimal PCB for a single component, used for prototyping, is called a breakout board. The purpose of a breakout board is to "break out" the leads of ...

  3. Breakout box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakout_box

    T1000-37 Tesuto Breakout box employing commonly used 37 position D-sub connectors that break out to banana jack test points. A four-port serial (RS-232) PCI Express ×1 expansion card with an octopus cable that breaks the card's DC-37 connector into four standard DE-9 connectors Example of a pocket-sized RS-232 breakout box that features switches to reconfigure or patch any or all the active ...

  4. Board-to-board connector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Board-to-board_connector

    Board-to-board (BTB) connectors are used to connect printed circuit boards (PCB), electronic components that contain a conductive pattern printed on the surface of the insulating base in an accurate and repeatable manner. Each terminal on a BTB connector is connected to a PCB.

  5. Breadboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breadboard

    A common use in the system on a chip (SoC) era is to obtain an microcontroller (MCU) on a pre-assembled printed circuit board (PCB) which exposes an array of input/output (IO) pins in a header suitable to plug into a breadboard, and then to prototype a circuit which exploits one or more of the MCU's peripherals, such as general-purpose input ...

  6. Automotive electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_electronics

    The earliest electronic systems available as factory installations were vacuum tube car radios, starting in the early 1930s.The development of semiconductors after World War II greatly expanded the use of electronics in automobiles, with solid-state diodes making the automotive alternator the standard after about 1960, and the first transistorized ignition systems appearing in 1963.

  7. Local Interconnect Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Interconnect_Network

    ISO 17987-1 :: Road vehicles - LIN Part 1 - General information and use case definition. ISO 17987-2 :: Road vehicles - LIN Part 2 - Transport protocol and network layer services. ISO 17987-3 :: Road vehicles - LIN Part 3 - Protocol specification. ISO 17987-4 :: Road vehicles - LIN Part 4 - Electrical physical layer (EPL) specification 12V / 24V.

  8. Routing (electronic design automation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routing_(electronic_design...

    In electronic design, wire routing, commonly called simply routing, is a step in the design of printed circuit boards (PCBs) and integrated circuits (ICs). It builds on a preceding step, called placement , which determines the location of each active element of an IC or component on a PCB.

  9. Data link connector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_link_connector

    The data link connector (DLC) is the multi-pin diagnostic connection port for automobiles, trucks, and motorcycles used to interface a scan tool with the control modules of a given vehicle and access on-board diagnostics and live data streams. [1] Prior to 1996, many OBD-I data link connector's were in the engine compartment, usually near the ...