On Feb 5, 2017, 15:06, at 15:06, Julius Lehmann julius@devpi.de wrote:
Regarding USB C you are right that there are four differential pairs on the connector. However, for communication only two pairs are used because the USB 3.1 protocol only uses two. On the device that has a USB C connector you need a dedicated controller that manages the orientation of the plug. Then the two data lines are connected to the right pins on the connector through a multiplexer. The other two pairs on the connector are for no use in USB mode but if you want to use USB C in alternate mode (e.g. DisplayPort), signals can be rerouted.
You can find all the information on usb.org (zip archive with full specification).
This basically means that the EOMA68 standard has two differential pairs that are not used for USB but if your intention was to make it available for USB C, an internal multiplexer would be needed.
Kind regards Julius Lehmann
On Feb 5, 2017, 14:20, at 14:20, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton lkcl@lkcl.net wrote:
crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware:
https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Sun, Feb 5, 2017 at 11:44 AM, Internet internet@devpi.de wrote:
Hey there!
I was wondering about the USB3.1 pinout in the EOMA68 standard. In
my
research on the USB Type C connector I found out that USB3.1 (Superspeed+) has only two differential signal pairs (one for
receiving,
one for transmitting)
http://pinoutguide.com/Slots/usb-type-c_pinout.shtml
two for receiving, two for transmitting, each 5gbit/s for a total of 10gb/sec. the connector and thus the pinouts are rotatable by 180 degrees so the pinouts on the first 12 pins (top row) are *identical* layout to the second 12 pins (bottom row) except in the reverse order. D+ and D- (the USB2 pins) are *missing* on one row of the receptacle so that you don't connect them up twice (which would be bad).
you *may* be thinking of USB 3.0 which is connector-compatible with USB 2.0 and is what you find on most laptops and desktop computers these days:
http://pinoutguide.com/Slots/usb_3_0_connector_pinout.shtml
that is *only* one set of (5gbit/sec) tx-rx differential pairs.
scared me for a minute that i'd messed it up... :)
l.
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